Robinson v. Hawkins
Robinson v. Hawkins
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
To a declaration in the usual form, for an assault, battery and wounding, the defendants below filed the following plea.
“The plaintiff, his action ought not to have and maintain because they say, that they are the sons of one Anne Hawkins, and reside with her in her dwelling house, and that the plaintiff, with others, came on the close of said Anne, in a forcible manner and disturbed the repose of said family, and defendants used such force as was absolutely necess
By demurring, the defendants involved an enquiry into the validity of their own plea. If that is bad, it is immaterial what the replication is.
We conceive the plea is indubitably bad. It is only a matter of inference, whether the close which it is alleged the plaintiff disturbed, was the one on which the dwelling of the family stood; and if it was, it would shock the peaceful feelings of society, to see the defendants beat, bruise and wound the plaintiff, even if he came in a forcible manner, to disturb the repose of the family, without requesting him first to depart, and if he refused, laying hands mildly upon him to take him away, and then to wound him although he did not render that wounding necessary by first endangering the defendants. The law will not indulge the passions to break into violence on the first rude entry, with constructive force, and to drive off by severe chastisement before other means are used; and, therefore, he who would justify an assult and battery, must shew that it was necessary for his safety, and the danger of personal injury must occur by an assault, before a wounding can be justified. Hence pleas of this nature, in defence of possession, or even of the domicil, must generally allege a request to depart, or a moliter manus imposuit, and an actual resistance, before beating is returned, and damage before wounding ensues, progressively, or they cannot be tolerated.
We are not told by this plea, whether the force was actual or constructive. If it was constructive only, then the request to depart, or the moliter manus, is necessary. If it was actual, then its de
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed with costs, and the cause be remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for new proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.