Anderson v. Smith

7 Ill. App. 354, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 232
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 4, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 7 Ill. App. 354 (Anderson v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Smith, 7 Ill. App. 354, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 232 (Ill. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Pillsbury, J.

This case, so far as the amount in controversy is concerned, is very insignificant; but considered as involving the questions of the right to defend animate property against'" the attacks of other animals, and the extent to wjpeh 'a person may lawfully go in such defense, it becomes ojié'of considerable interest and importance.

It is quite evident from the instructions given for plaintijf below, and particularly the fifth and sixth, that the court below intended to. inform the jury that the law in this State is, that a party could not lawfully take the life of the dogs in question in defense of his poultry under any circumstances, as the party had an action for his damages, and the law did not allow any one to go to the extent of killing dogs except in the one case of killing sheep by them. Do these instructions state the law as at present existing in this State?

The law from the earliest times has recognized .the right of a man to defend his property against the unlawful acts of man or beast, the question in the adjudicated cases not being whether such right of defense existed, but whether it was properly exercised in the given case. This right of defending property from unjustifiable seizures, attacks or destruction, is • inseparably connected with and necessarily attaches to, and springs from the natural right of acquiring, holding and enjoying property.

This right exists independently of any provisions of positive law, either constitutional or statutory, and an examination of such provisions as well as the rules of the common law, will show that the right of such defense has ever been recognized as existing, and that the object of all such enactments and the establishing of all such rules has been to confine such defense to whatha« been deemed by legislatures and judges a reasonable necessity for its exercise in a given case. It is a rule of the commonWaw, affirmed by Sec. 148 of our Criminal Code, that if a per .n by violence or surprise attempt to commit a felony upon the person, habitation or property of another, the latter may repel force by force, and if in the conflict he happen to kill the offender, the homicide is justifiable. 2 Arch. Cr. Pr. 225.

The law limits this extreme remedy to cases of threatened felony, because it places such a transcendent value upon human life that it conclusively presumes that it is not reasonable to take the life of a human being when the threatened injury, if consummated, would be but a mere trespass or misdemeanor. In such cases the act ceases to be a defense and becomes aggression. At the same time, while forbidding the shedding of human blood in defense of person or property, where no felony is intended, it does not deprive a party of the right to make such reasonable defense as the necessities of the particular cáse may require. A party having the right to defend his person and property, his justification must, in the very nature of things, depend upon the fact whether, in die given case, he has exercised that right in a reasonable or an unreasonable manner, taking into consideration all the circumstances of the case surrounding the transaction, and in this regard every case must be determined from its own circumstances, for it is impossible to establish an iron rule of law that will fully meet the exigencies of every case that may possibly arise.

The most that can properly be said as a rule of law is, tliafl there must be an apparent necessity for the defense, honestly “ believed to be real, and then the acts of defense must in themselves be reasonable. Acts beyond reason are excessive. The consequences of the proposed act to the aggressor should be considered in connection with the consequences of non-action to the party defending, whether the defense be made in favor of person or property ;l[ and in case of defense of domestic^ animals from the attacks of other animals, the relative value of the animals may be a proper circumstance for the jury to consider in arriving at a conclusion whether the defense was a reasonable one under the circumstances. Cooley on Torts, § 346.

If a man should find his. neighbor’s cat in his poultry yard killing his chickens, it might be reasonable that he should, for the preservation of his fowls, if the necessity was apparent, shoot the eat, while if a valuable horse of the same neighbor was found in the yard, crushing the life out of the chickens,dt might not be reasonable to shoot the horse, even if he could not protect his fowls otherwise. But if the same horse should be found in a yard where there were other horses, and while wrongfully there should attack another equally valuable, and it was apparent that the horse attacked would be killed, would it be unreasonable for the owner of the latter horse to protect his own property upon his own premises, even if the life of his neighbor’s horse should be sacrificed to preserve that of his own ? The law regards the right of the slayer to his horse, in Í the case supposed, as sacred as the right of his neighbor to his \jproperty, and his horse being where he had a lawful right to be, his owner must have the power to protect him, so long, at least, as the consequences of the necessary acts of defense are not more disastrous to his neighbor, than the consequences of not acting would be to himself. 1 I It appears to me that in cases of the character of the one at I bar, the jury must in a great measure be left to judge from all the facts and circumstances in the case, not only of the necesJ sity of any defense, but of the reasonable necessity of the par- ’ ticular defense made.

The jury could but understand from the fifth and sixth instructions that a party could not lawfully defend his fowls, even upon his own premises, against the attacks of dogs, but that he must suffer the injury to be inflicted, and then seek his remedy by action, as they are told that it is only in case of sheep-killing that the law allows the right to kill a dog in defense of property.

Had the jury been permitted to look at the case in all its bearings, they might have found that the “Irish setter pups” were naturally vicious, especially when “ birds ” were at hand upon which they could commence an education that would, if industriously pursued, render them proficient in their profession in later years, making them honored descendants of a worthy thoroughbred sire. The jury also might have found that these pups, though young in years and small of stature, were, from the fact of their being of such pure “Irish setter blood,” far more dangerous to chickens than other older and larger dogs of less exalted lineage.

Suppose the jury had found that there was an apparent danger that the hen would have been killed by the dogs, and a reasonable, prudent man in the position of the defendant at the time of the shooting would have considered it absolutely necessary to take the life of the dogs to preserve the life of his chicken, would the law under such circumstances, justify the defendant in shooting the dogs ?

We use the words apparent danger because we do not consider that real danger is indispensable in defense of property, any more than' it is in defense of person. In either case a party must judge of and act from the appearances.

In Cooley on Torts, § 346, it is said that “ Sometimes a vicious animal may lawfully be killed, though the circumstances would not support a-n action against the owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ill. App. 354, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-smith-illappct-1880.