Worlledge v Manning

Worlledge v Manning (1786) East, 26 Geo. 3 CB; 126 ER 34[1] is a landmark judgment in English law by the House of Lords[2] and was formative to the modern legal understanding of private property rights.

Worlledge v Manning (1786)
CourtHouse of Lords
DecidedMay 1786 (1786-05)
Citation(s) East, 26 Geo. 3. C.B.; 126 ER 34
Keywords
gleaning property law

The matter related to gleaners' rights and arose from a disagreement about gleaning during the 1785 harvest. After the barley crop had been cut and cleared, a Timworth shoemaker, Benjamin Manning, had gone onto the land of John Worlledge, the richest farmer, in the adjoining parish of Ingham, Suffolk to glean and had carried away a quantity of barley. Worlledge disputed his right to do so and brought an action for trespass in the Court of Common Pleas. The court decided in Worlledge's favour in May 1786 and awarded him damages and costs.[3]

The court held that the defendant was not an inhabitant of the parish in which he gleaned, and was not entitled to the gleaning support. The Court therefore decided that a stranger had no right to glean.[4]

This was the first time that gleaners’ rights had been challenged and it served as a precedent and possible catalyst for the landmark case Steel v Houghton a year later.

In a separate matter, Manning attempted to prosecute Worlledge for assault at the Suffolk quarter sessions court.

See also

References

  1. The report of this case is inserted within the report of Steel v Houghton.
  2. Henry Blackstone, Reports of cases argued and determined in the Courts of Common Pleas Volume 2 page 54(accessed 2 October 2012).
  3. Henry Blackstone, Law Library, Volume 9 (access date: 2 October 2012).
  4. Henry Blackstone, Reports of cases argued and determined in the Courts of Common Pleas Volume 2 page 54(accessed 2 October 2012).
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