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DETAINER

1. The act of keeping a person against his will, or of keeping goods or property. All illegal detainers of the person amount to false imprisonment, and may be remedied by habeas corpus. 2. 2. A detainer or detention of goods is either lawful or unlawful; when lawful, the party having possession of them cannot be deprived of it. The detention may be unlawful, although the original taking was lawful; as when goods were distrained for rent, and the rent was -afterwards paid; or when they ‘Were pledged, and the money borrowed, and interest were afterwards paid; in these, and the like cases, the owner should make a demand, and if the possessor refuse to restore them, trover, detinue, or replevin will lie, at the option of the plaintiff. 3. 3. There may also be a detainer of land and this is either lawful and peaceable, or unlawful and forcible. 1. The detainer is lawful where the entry has been lawful, and the estate is held by virtue of some right. 2. It is unlawful and forcible, where the entry has been unlawful, and with force, and it is retained, by force, against right; or even when the entry has been peaceable and lawful, if the detainer be by force, and against right; as, if a tenant at will should detain with force, after the will has determined, he will be guilty of a forcible detainer. A forcible detainer is a distinct offence from a forcible entry. 8 Cowen, 216. See Forcible entry and detainer. 4. 4. A writ or instrument, issued or made by a competent officer, authorizing the keeper of a prison to keep in his custody a person therein named. A detainer may be lodged against. one within the walls of a prison, on what account soever he is there.

Law Dictionary – Alternative Legal Definition

The act (or the juridical fact) of withholding from a person lawfully entitled the possession of land or goods; or the restraint of a man’s personal liberty against his will. The wrongful keeping of a person’s goods is called an “unlawful detainer” although the original taking may have been lawful. As, if one distrains another’s cattle, damage feasant, and before they are impounded the owner tenders sufficient amends; now, though the original taking was lawful, the subsequent detention of them after tender of amends is not lawful, and the owner has an action of replevin to recover them, in which he will recover damages for the detention, and not for the caption, because the original taking was lawful. 3 Steph. Comm. In practice. A writ or instrument Issued or made by a competent officer, authorising the keeper of a prison to keep in his custody a person therein named. A detainer may be lodged against one within the walls of a prison, on what account soever he is there. Com. Dig. “Process,” E. (3 B.) This writ was supersedeo by 1 A 2 Vict. c. 110, $f 1. 2. Forcible detainer. See that title.

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