Court Opinion

ID: 8358607
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-18 00:12:12.327193+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:46:00.672486
License: Public Domain

Nott, J.
The principal grounds in this case, on which the defendant rests his motion for a new trial, is a misdirection of the judge in the court below, in charging the jury, that from the evidence of a forcible detainer, they might find the defendant guilty of a forcible entry.
Every unlawful entry upon the possession of another is, in the eye of thedaw, a forcible entry; . But it must be an actual, and not a mere constructive possession. Two persons cannot be in the actual possession of the same land, at the same time. And wherever the .unlawful entry of one, necessarily dispossesses the other, an in•dictment for a forcible entry may be maintained. And although *414the possession may have been surreptitiously obtained, yet, if it is maintained by force, the entry will be considered forcible. Other. w*se a person may be dispossed of his cornfield, his orchard, and even his dwelling house, if an intruder should slyly creep in, when . . , he is out about his ordinary business. It-is not necessary, as has been contended, that to constitute a forcible entry, it should be with a multitude of people. The statute of 5 Richard, 2 c. 8, forbids any person to enter into any lands, or tenements, except when entry is given, and in such case, not with strong hand, nor with multitude of people. So that where the entry is lawful, it must not be done with multitude of people ; but where it is not lawful, it may not be done at all. And from the relative situation of the parties before, and the violence and force used after the entry, the jury have a right to find the .defendant guilty of a forcible entry, although no person was present at the time to prove the fact. The decision of the judge, therefore, was correct and proper; and the verdict ought not to be disturbed.
Brevard, Grimke, Bax, and Smith, Js., concurred.