primitive but quicker and usually more effedlve remedy 

 of requesting the trespasser to leave, and In case of 

 negledl on the latter's part to Immediately comply with 

 the requeit, ejecting him with force. He may be pushed 

 or, if necessary on account of his resl^ance, carried off. 

 No more force mu^ be used than is reasonably necessary 

 otherwise the trespasser himself may take legal pro- 

 ceedings agaln^ his ejedors. 



The occupier of land next a public road or through 

 whose Icind a footpath runs may treat m this way any 

 one who thus loiters for the purpose of taking game, etc., 

 or Interfering with the shooting, provided that in the case 

 of the ordinary roadway bounding the land the loiterer 

 is on that half of the roadway next the land. 



It is only the occupier of the land who has this sum- 

 mary rem.edy and not the landlord to whom the shooting 

 is resei*ved (unless he has expressly reserved the soil of 

 the roadway when letting the land) nor the sporting 

 tenant to whom the rights have been let. Either of these 

 can only so ad if he has the authority of the adual 

 occupier of the land. 



TRESPASS /;/ PURSUIT o/GAME 

 IN THE DAYTIME 



"Daytime" means from commencement of the first hour 

 before sunrise to end of the first hour after sunset, by local 

 or astronomical, not Greenwich, time. 



In the daytime anyone who is found or is proved to 

 have entered or been on land in search or pursuit of game 

 or woodcocks, snipe, quails, landrails, or rabbits, to which 



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