It was incumbent upon the State to prove that the defendant (indicted' under The Code, Sec. 1120,) had entered upon the land after being forbiddeu so to do. It devolved upon the defendant to show by way of defense that he entered under a license or a bona fide claim of right, since those are matters peculiarly within his knowledge. The license referred to is not a license from the owner,, as that is negatived by the allegation that the defendant was forbidden to enter, but it is the license from some justice,, mentioned in the proviso to Section 1120. This license,, likp the license to sell liquor on the trial of an indictment for retailing without license, is a matter of defense, and it is incumbent upon the defendant to show it. The State is not called on to prove the negative. State v. Morrison, 14 N. C., 299; State v. Emry, 98 N. C., 668. It devolved upon the defendant to prove in defense, not merely a belief that he had a bona fide right to enter, but he “ was. bound to prove that he had reasonable ground for such belief.” State v. Bryson, 81 N. C., 595; State v. Crawley, 103 N. C., 353.
In the present case it was in evidence that the title te the premises had been decided adversely to the defendant in the superior court (which judgment on appeal here was. affirmed,) and that the entry was made by the defendant after such adverse decision below and pending the appeal to this Court. In the face of an adverse decision in the superior court, the defendant had no right to take the law into his own hands and make an entry on the laud in controversy. The defendant introduced no evidence even of his belief of his right to enter. However reasonable or-unreasonable might be his grounds for a belief that the superior court was in error in adjudging the title to the premises against him, he had ño reasonable ground of a. *1196belief that he had a “ right to enter ” after such judgment, until reversed.
There being no evidence of reasonable ground for such belief, “the court properly instructed the jury in substance, that if they believed the evidence the defendant was guilty.” State v. Fisher, 109 N. C., 817.
No Error.