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Long v Clarke & another
[1894] 1 QB 119
The bailiff climbed over a wall at the back of
premises and entered through a window. The
plaintiff was the bill of sale holder who already
had a man in possession on the premises. He paid
off the landlord to protect his existing possession
then sued to recover his money. The plaintiff
argued that the curtilage of the house was
protected from forced entry in the same way as the
house itself.
The plaintiff's claim failed and he
appealed.
Judgment of Lord Esher
"In this case we are dealing with a landlord's
bailiff distraining for rent.
What is the ordinary law applicable to such a
case? It gives a right to the landlord to do that
which, if any other person did it, would he a
trespass, and the question is whether what has been
done in the present case is within what is
permitted by the law of distress.
When a landlord goes into a house to distrain,
whether the door he open or shut, he does that
which in any other person would he a trespass, and
it is just the same if he merely walks across the
land to the front door.
The sole question is what limitations on the
right of the landlord to go on the premises and
distrain the law imposes on him. He cannot go into
any building or into any house if he can only do so
by breaking into it.
He can go in at the door, which is the most
obvious way of entering; but further, he can get in
by a window if it is left open.
There is no trespass in doing either of these
acts, because he does not break in. So it is
incorrect to say, as has been suggested, that the
landlord cannot go into the house if he finds a
hole in the side of it, and for the same reason,
that in so entering he is not breaking in.
This law is applicable to any building into
which the landlord wants to get for the purpose of
distraining, such as a warehouse, a stable, or a
barn. Thus, supposing he enters a curtilage without
breaking anything, still he cannot break into any
stable or building within the curtilage which is
locked.
This shows that under the law of distress the
curtilage is no part of the house, and it is
incorrect to say that he cannot go into the house
if he finds a door or a window open because he has
previously got over a wall or gate into the
curtilage.
Another defect in the plaintiff's case is this.
Supposing the curtilage to be part of the house,
the bailiff did not break into the curtilage. He
did not break any door or anything else; he merely
got over a wall.
I see no difference between getting over a wall
to get into the curtilage and getting on to the
wall of the house in getting in at a window in it,
and it seems to me to he plain that if a landlord
can get into a curtilage without breaking anything
he may do so, just as he can get into a window on
the same conditions.
The case of Scott v Buckley is cited in support
of the plaintiff's case but there must he something
omitted in the report, for I cannot think that
Byles J, who decided it, would have dissented from
the decision in Eldridge v Stacey to which he
himself was a party only three years
previously.
I think, therefore, the action properly failed,
and the appeal must he dismissed.
Lopes LJ:
I am of the same opinion. A landlord may enter
the demised premises to levy a distress, and may
commit in so doing an act which in any one else
would be a trespass, provided that he does not
break open any outer door.
He may walk over a garden or park to get to the
building, which in any other person would be a
trespass; but when he gets to the building, he
cannot break open anything to gain access to
it.
In the word "building" I include a stable, a
barn, or any other sort of building.
The question raised in this case is whether the
landlord or his bailiff may climb over a wall
enclosing a yard, and thus get to the building, so
as to he able to proceed by any unfastened door or
open window to effect a levy in the house.
It is clear to me that he could do so. The yard
was no more part of the house than the garden or
park which I have mentioned would he. The bailiff
breaking nothing in getting into the yard has done
nothing wrong.
The case is similar to that of Eldridge v Stacey
it is hardly possible to imagine two cases more
similar to one another. It was there decided that
there is no illegality in distraining for rent by
climbing over a fence and so gaining access to the
house by an open door. I see no distinction for
this purpose between a fence and a wall.
The judges who decided that case were Erle CJ
and Williams, Byles, and Keating, JJ. The case of
Scott v Buckley was relied on for the plaintiff,
and certainly the head-note supports his
contention. Looking, however, to the fact that it
was decided by Byles, J., not long after the
decision of the other case in which he took a part,
I cannot think the report is correct, and I think
that at least there must have been some distinction
between the cases which has not been noticed in the
report.
However that may be, I think that the decision
in Eldridge v. Stacey should he supported, and
consequently that the present appeal should be
dismissed."
Kay LJ
"If there had been a door in the wall of the
yard, and the landlord had effected an entrance by
breaking it, I should have thought he would have
exceeded the power given him by the law and become
a trespasser, and even if the house door had been
open would have been a trespasser
ab-initio .
It is not, however, necessary to decide that
question. That is not what the bailiff did, for he
got over the wall without breaking anything.
In any one else the act of getting over the wall
would have been a trespass, and the question is
whether it is so in the case of the landlord or his
bailiff.
The land belongs to the landlord; but he has let
it for a term, and has no right to enter, with this
exception, that the law permits him to do so to
distrain in the case of rent in arrears. If there
were no wall, the landlord might walk over the land
surrounding the house in order to reach it.
The question is whether climbing over a wall to
exercise his right to go on the land makes him a
trespasser. If it does, he is a trespasser
ab-initio.
No case has said so, and in fact if the word
"wall" is substituted for "fence" in the decision
in Eldridge v Stacey, that case would be identical
with the one we are considering. We are not bound
by that decision; but Erle LJ, in giving judgment,
pointed out that none of the authorities cited
warranted the conclusion that the distress was
rendered unlawful by the broker getting over the
fence, and in that view I concur.
Three years later there was a case of Scott v
Buckley. As it reads in the report, it seems to be
an authority contrary to that of Eldridge v Stacey.
It was decided by Byles J, who was a party to the
judgment in the previous case, and I am driven to
conclude that there was some fact not reported
which made the two cases distinguishable. The only
restriction that the law imposes on the right of
the landlord to enter and distrain for rent is that
to do so he must not break in.
He has not done that in this case, but has got
over a wall, committing in doing so no further
trespass than he would have committed in walking
across the land if there had been no wall there. I
agree, therefore, that the plaintiff's case fails,
and that the appeal must he dismissed."
Comment
The case rules that bailiffs can climb over a
wall to enter an unlocked building.
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