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Ryan v Shilcock [1851] 7 Exch
72
Background
The plaintiff was a tenant of the defendant of
premises including a stable, which was a detached
building.
The rent for the property was in arrears so the
defendant landlord entered the stable and
distrained goods.
He entered by pulling out the hasp and staple
lock from the wooden door without unlocking the
padlock.
The tenant sued for an illegal distress but the
trial jury found that the staple had been pulled
out without violence and that entry and distress
was lawful.
The plaintiff appealed to the Court of
Exchequer.
Judgment of Pollock CB: "In this case the
question turned upon the power of a landlord to
make a distress, that is, how far he was justified
in making an entry into premises, for which purpose
he used no more force than was necessary to open
the outer door, which was shut to keep the door
closed only, and not to keep people out. According
to the evidence in the present case, the door had
on it a padlock with a staple; but the mode by
which the owner and everyone else opened the door
in order to obtain admittance was by pulling out
the staple, which served much in the same way as a
button or nail does, which is sometimes to be found
used for keeping gates "shut," an ambiguous term,
and meaning either a mode of preventing a door from
opening of itself, or from being opened by force or
violence, or by such persons as have the key or
some other means of opening the door.
The jury found, upon the question being
expressly put to them, that the padlock and staple
were not for the purpose of keeping the door
fastened, but merely closed; and as it is no part
of the present question whether the verdict was
against the evidence, the question is reduced to
this, namely, whether a landlord, who on coming to
his tenant's premises for the purpose of
distraining finds the outer door closed, but
capable of being opened by lifting a latch, is
justified in so doing. We are of opinion that the
landlord has authority by law to open the door in
the ordinary way in which other persons can do it,
when it is left so as to be accessible to all who
have occasion to go into the premises.
In the First Institute folio 161a, Lord Coke, in
commenting upon Littleton, explains the meaning of
the term "inclosure," to be found in the 137th
section, in the following words: "Inclosure . . . .
for the lord cannot break open the gates, or break
down the inclosures to take a distress; and
therefore the law accounts it a disseisin." Now, if
these two matters be taken together, inasmuch as
breaking down the inclosures would clearly be a
forcible entry, we think that the breaking open the
gates must be understood to be such a breaking as
is also equivalent to a forcible entry; for Lord
Coke proceeds to say: "But all these are intended
by Littleton to be disseisins after an actual
seisin had, and when the rent is behind; otherwise
none of these are disseisins at all." Now, there is
a passage in Fitzherhert's Abridgment 'Distress'
pl.21, which was much relied upon by the plaintiff,
"Nota, that a man came to the stable of his tenant
to make a distress, and when he came, the door was
shut with a bar, and he put in his hand to a hole
(il mitt eins sa main a un ptuz) and took away the
bar and opened the door, and entered and took two
cows in the name of a distress; and because he
opened the door in this manner, it was adjudged
that the distress was tortious."
On consulting the dictionary, we find that the
word ptuz signifies a hole. It is pretty manifest
that the operation alluded to in the preceding
passage very much resembles that of a person who,
on finding a hole in a door or pane of glass, puts
his hand in through the hole to remove the
fastening of the door or window, and so gains
admittance into the premises, which no doubt
amounts to both a burglary and trespass, as such is
not the accustomed mode of obtaining admittance
into the premises.
The passage from Lord Coke is a direct authority
in favour of the defendant; and that from
Fitzherhert, when examined, turns out to be so
also.
We may observe that, as to the passage referred
to during the argument in Comyn's Digest,
'Execution', that the sheriff may not open a latch,
there is no reference to any authority in support
of it; and it is clear that the cases cited do not
support that proposition. However, that passage
applies only to a sheriff entering a dwelling-house
under an execution. As the rule will be discharged
on this ground, it therefore becomes unnecessary to
express any opinion upon the other questions in the
case."
Summary
This judgment confirms a bailiff may enter by
normal means just like any other visitor to or user
of premises. That includes lifting a bolt or
turning a key that is in the lock.
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