Court Opinion

ID: 3674444
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:21:45.667972+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:21:51.688732
License: Public Domain

Defendant was indicted for a forcible entry and detainer at common law. The jury found him not guilty of the forcible entry, but guilty of the forcible detainer, as charged.
(349)   The judgment was arrested, and the solicitor for the State appealed.
The Attorney-General admitted, under the authority of S. v. Johnson,18 N.C. 324, that a forcible detainer was not indictable at common law when the entry was peaceable and lawful; but he insisted that it was indictable when the entry was unlawful, although it was made in a peaceable manner.
The question intended to be made is not presented. The jury have not found that the entry was unlawful, and there is nothing from which it can be implied. It is said that it should be implied from the finding that he"unlawfully and with a strong hand detained." Non constant, for it may be that the defendant entered as a tenant at will, or for years, or per autervie, and unlawfully detained and refused to give up possession after the expiration of his estate. Such unlawful detainer was clearly not an indictable offense at common law, because the entry was both peaceable and lawful, and the reversioner, if he cannot enter peaceably, is put to his action.
PER CURIAM.                                                Affirmed.
(350)