austinrealtor wrote:The Annoyed Man wrote:
I don't know what the law would say, but here is what I would say...
When you borrow to buy a car, you have a contract with the lender. If you fail to maintain your part of the contract by failing to make the payments, then you are no longer the owner of the vehicle. The bank is. And you can't shoot somebody for coming on your property, like a driveway, to reclaim their property — of which you are illegally in possession.
TAM, I disagree with you in terms of legality (which you didn't claim in first place, so won't waste time with it) but also in non-legal terms or "common sense" or whatever. If you step one foot onto my real property without my permission and without a recognized alternative permission (court order, warrant etc), then you are gravely violating my rights and, depending on the aggressiveness of your trespass, threatening my property and possibly my life. I will respond with an aggressive defense of my property and my life, to the degree which I believe it is necessary stop your instrusion (note this may be as simple benign as me shouting "get of my property" - doesn't have to involve force or deadly force). If you enter my property without legitimate "permissions", you are a threat and will be treated as such. Whether or not I legally or illegally am in possession of your personal property when you do so is incidental.
I understand your point, but consider this...
Your car is parked in your driveway, just off the sidewalk, and not inside a gate. Are you going to kill a repo man for taking it? It
is on your "real" property" (barely). But if you have violated the terms of your loan contract by failing to make the payments and have not responded to any warnings of repossession (banks
do mail these warnings out), then it is no longer "your" car when they come to get it. Are you going to kill a repo man when he takes your car from the curb out in front of your house? I ask because
NO repo man is going to break into your home or your garage to steal your car. If the car is hidden in a garage, or behind a locked gate in the rear of your property, then they will call the police for assistance because the repo men do not have the legal authority on their own - so far as I know - to cut locks or break and enter to take a car.
My point is that a vehicle repo could not be interpreted as an aggressive attack against you or your family. It is not a home invasion - no matter how much you want to convince the police that it is. I have a family too, and I
will use deadly force against anyone who seeks to harm them, without remorse, if that is what it takes to stop the attacker. I will use deadly force against an intruder inside of my home, without remorse, particularly at night. But I'm not going to shoot a thief who tries to steal a lawn mower off my front lawn. You may be legally justified in Texas to use deadly force to protect property, but in
my book, the real issue is whether or not my own safety, or the safety of the ones I love, is at risk in the defense of that property.
In other words, if you break into my home at night to steal my TV, I would assume the worst and use deadly force as necessary. But if you break into my car, just inside my driveway or parked out at the curb, other factors come into play,
PARTICULARLY if I've been getting non-payment notices from the bank and I have no excuse not to believe that the vehicle is being repo-ed. You can always report it stolen, and the cops will either arrest the thief, or tell you that it was repossessed.
And then there are the tactical issues, which have been covered extensively in other threads, but the bottom line is that it is a huge tactical error to go rushing out of your house to confront a potential thief, especially at night, and especially when you have no idea whether he has any accomplices watching his six o'clock. So you might be rushing out to stop your car from being stolen, and get killed yourself; whereas you have all the tactical advantage by staying inside your home. And like I said, no lawful repo man is going to invade your home.
And then there's the whole the moral issue of whether it is justifiable to kill another person over property. My personal rule of thumb is that if my life is threatened by the attempt to take my property, then yes, deadly force is justified. I will shoot a mugger in a heartbeat. But if I come home just in time to see a pickup truck pull away from the curb in front of my house with my 57" DLP TV in the back of it, I'm not going to chase him down and kill him over it. However, each of us has to make that decision for themselves. I just know what kind of people I want to surround myself with, and it doesn't include the kind of person who would kill another over a stupid TV when their own life isn't being threatened.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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