Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Hodgeden v. Hubbard (财产被骗,可以武力夺回吗?另一个case brief)

VT Court - 1846

Facts:

  • P bought a stove from D's department store on credit.
  • P carried the stove away and D immediately realized that P had made a misrepresentation and did not have the credit to buy the stove.
  • D chased after P and caught up to him 2 miles away.
  • P drew a knife on D, and D had to resort to force to recover the stove.
  • P sued D for assault, battery, and trespass to chattel.

Procedural History:

  • Lower court found for P, D liable.
  • Court reversed, D not liable.

Issues:

  • May a person use reasonable force to recover property fraudulently obtained from him?

Holding/Rule:

  • A person may use reasonable force to recover property fraudulently obtained from him.

Reasoning:

  • The stove did not really pass from D to P since P obtained possession through fraud and misrepresentation.
  • Thus, D still retained ownership of the stove, and P's possession was unlawful.
  • In recovering the stove, no violence to the P was necessary if P had not resisted. When P drew his knife, P became the aggressor, and D had the right to hold him by force.
  • As long as the force was not unnecessary, D was justified.

Dissent:

  • None.

Notes:

  • One can only recover a chattel immediately after it is unlawfully taken. (fresh pursuit).
  • Reasonable force may be used (no serious bodily harm or deadly force).

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