Briggs v. Thompson
Briggs v. Thompson
Opinion of the Court
Trespass lies where the plaintiff has the absolute or general property, although he has never had the actual possession; it being a rule of law, that the general property of personal chattels, primd facie as to all civil pui'poses, draws to it the possession.
The owner of tithe, where it has been set out to him, may maintain trespass against the occupier of the land who turns in cattle and destroys or injures it: Williams v. Ladner, 8 T. Rep. 72. And by analogy, the landlord in this case, Thompson, might have maintained trespass against the tenant for taking his share of the hay, after it had been set out to him. But the tenant had merely cut the hay and housed it in bulk in the barn. There is not a scintilla of evidence that any division had been made. Each was entitled to an undivided moiety, and the tenant was in possession of the whole. Trespass cannot be sustained against a joint tenant or tenant in common for taking away the property and holding it exclusively from his co-tenant, because each has an interest in the whole, and a right to dispose thereof: Martyn v. Knowlys, 8 T. Rep. 145; 4 East. 121; 1 T. Rep. 658. If the co-tenant destroys the property, the rule has been held differently: 2 Saund, 47, o.; Co. Littleton, 200 a. In this case, if the landlord had any- remedy against his tenant for taking away the hay, it was by action on the contract of lease. The second point of the defendant ought, therefore, to have been answered in the affirmative. There was no evidence whatever, of a division of the hay. But there is evidence that a day was appointed for that purpose, but that it was not done. I might add in this part of the case, that in Olwine v. Rinehart, 5 W. & S. 157, it was ruled, that when the rent is payable in kind, the landlord has no interest in the grain, until it is severed and delivered to him.
The third point relates to the suspension of the rent. The court say that “if the lessee went off and abandoned the premises, leaving them at waste, and the lessor merely went into these abandoned premises, and occupied, and locked up the barn to preserve them and the hay, and neither the lessee nor Ms under-tenant
The court ought, therefore, to have given a distinct, unequivocal
There is one aspect of the evidence which was not mooted in the court below, either by counsel or .the court, to which I feel it necessary to advert, so as to prevent misapprehension. An entry only suspends accruing rent, not that which has fallen due before entry. This may -be of some' consequence, if the cause is tried again.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
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