The bill was for a forcible entry into the dwelling house of the prosecutor, and a detainer, he being present forbidding the same.
The evidence was, that the defendant went to the house of the prosecutor (Clodfelter) in his absence, his wife and daughter being present. When the husband returned, the defendant was in a wrangle with his wife, and he heard the following colloquy:
Wife. — "If you do not intend to marry my daughter, you ought to let her alone."
Defendant. — "It is not my intention to marry her."
Wife. — "What do you want with her then? — to make her your prostitute?"
Defendant. — "Yes."
Upon this, the husband ordered the defendant out of the house; after refusing to go for some time, the defendant at last went out into the yard and procured a club, where he remained for some time — more than half an hour — using abusive language to the prosecutor, and challenging him out to fight: prosecutor was deterred from opposing him with force, by his violence and superior strength. The defendant had been previously ordered by the prosecutor not to come to his house, and this visit, when he was temporarily absent, was against his will.
The point was, whether these facts made a case of indictable trespass as charged. His Honor instructed the jury that they did. Defendant excepted. Verdict for the State. Judgment and Appeal. *Page 470 The counsel for the defendant admits that the testimony given by the prosecutor on the trial, was sufficient to support the conviction for a forcible detainer, but he contends that it did not support the charge for a forcible entry, at least, not for one in the presence of the owner of the dwelling house; and that, as the verdict of guilty was general, he is entitled to a venire de novo. The cases of the State v. Ward, 1 Jones' Rep. 293, and the State v. McCauless, 9 Ired. Rep. 375, upon which he relies, show the legitimacy of his conclusion, provided his premises be correct.
The question then arises, is the testimony sufficient to support the verdict upon the charge of a forcible entry in the presence of the owner? We think that it is, and that we are justified in so holding by the principles established in the adjudications of this Court. In the case of the State v. Fort, 4 Dev. and Bat. Rep. 192, it was said by the Court, not to be necessary in an indictment for a forcible entry into a dwelling house, to charge or show that the proprietor was in the house, or present at the time of the violent dispossession. In the State v. Walker, 10 Ire. 234, it was held that though the possession of a man's dwelling house by his family, was his possession, and might be so charged in an indictment for a forcible entry, yet, if it were alleged that the owner was personally present at the time of the injury complained of, the proof must sustain that allegation. The indictment in the present case does allege that the owner was personally present, forbidding the entry. So that the question is narrowed down to this, were the circumstances under which the defendant entered, sufficient to make his entry forcible, and was the owner present at the time?
The testimony shows that the defendant was a man of superior strength; that he had been forbidden by the prosecutor to visit his house; that he went there in defiance of the prohibition, and engaged in a quarrel with the prosecutor's wife. *Page 471 declaring his purpose to make a prostitute of their daughter. Such an entry, against the owner's will and with such an intent, was undoubtedly unlawful, and it is equally clear, that it was much more than a bare trespass. And if there were any doubt about this, the defendant's conduct after he was ordered out of the house by the prosecutor, which was part of the same transaction, puts the matter beyond all question. His superior strength, his abusive language and his demonstrations of violence, had the same tendency, as numbers would have done, to alarm the prosecutor's family, and to cause him to commit a breath of the peace: and conduct having such a tendency was held sufficient, in the case of the State v.Toliver, 5 Ired. Rep. 452, to support an indictment similar to the present. The inquiry remains, was the owner present forbidding the entry? The acts of the defendant, from his first entrance into, until his final departure from the house, were one continuing transaction, and the presence of the owner during any part of it was sufficient to sustain the charge. If a man leave his dwelling house for a mere temporary purpose, as for instance to attend church, to visit a neighbor, or to work in his own fields, he cannot be said in law, to have left it, so as to make the unlawful entry of a trespasser an entry in his absence, and if he return while the trespasser is still in the house, the unlawful and forcible entry will, in contemplation of law, have been in his presence. In State v. Walker, ubisupra, the owner of the dwelling house was absent, and did not return until the day after the forcible trespass had been committed, and the defendant had gone, which makes it a very different case from the present.
We find no error in the record to prevent the judgment of the Superior Court from being pronounced against the defendant, and to that end this opinion will be certified as the law directs.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
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