Barnes v. Pleasanton

73 A.2d 787, 45 Del. 326, 6 Terry 326, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 140
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 27, 1950
Docket779 Civ. A. 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 A.2d 787 (Barnes v. Pleasanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Pleasanton, 73 A.2d 787, 45 Del. 326, 6 Terry 326, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 140 (Del. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

*328 Richards, Chief Justice.

Under the common law rule, it was the duty of every person, subject to the exception of cattle being lawfully driven on the public highway, to keep his cattle on his own premises, by fences or otherwise, and if by reason of his failure to do so they strayed upon his neighbor’s lands, they were trespassers and the owner was liable for any damage occasioned thereby. Vandergrift v. Delaware Railroad Co., 2 Houst. 287; Carey v. Schweitzer, 3 W. W. Harr. 211, 134 A. 52.

When this country was first settled, there not being much land under cultivation, cattle were generally allowed to roam at ■large .through the uninclosed woodlands. The question of fencing in many of the states, including the Province of Pennsylvania and the three lower counties on the Delaware, was regulated by statute. An act was passed at a very early date, applying to the territory which now constitutes the State of Delaware, and is found in Volume 1 of the Laws of Delaware, Chapter 70A, page 180. With certain changes which have been made from time to time, this act exists today and is found in the Revised Code of Delaware of 1935, Chapter 103. '■•

*329 The common law rule relating to fences, as well as the statutes passed in many of the states, including the Province of Pennsylvania and w'"-.t now constitutes the State of Delaware, are ■ fully discussed in Carey v. Schweitzer, supra, and it is not necessary to consider them further.

I am called upon in this case to determine the meaning of the fence law as it exists in this State toda)^ in Chapter 103 of the Revised Code of Delaware 1935.

Section 1 of the Act, being paragraph 4173 of the Code, defines what constitutes a lawful fence and prohibits the use of barbed wire for division fences except by mutual consent of the owners of the property divided by such fences. Section 2 of the Act, being paragraph 4174 of the Code, provides “If any horse, cattle, goat, sheep, or hogs, shall trespass on any grounds enclosed with lawful fence, the owner of such animal, so trespassing, shall pay such damages as shall be awarded by the fence-viewers; and any person having unruly horses, goats, sheep, hogs, or cattle, which break through lawful fences, shall, after notice thereof, be liable for double damages for any trespass committed by such animal, after such notice, to be awarded by the fence-viewers”. Section 3 of the Act, being paragraph 4175 of the Code, provides “The Court of General Sessions shall annually appoint a sufficient number of persons in each Hundred to be fence-viewers who shall be the sole judges of the sufficiency of any fences, of the charges of making or repairing partition, or other fences, and how borne and of damages by animals trespassing.”

It is Section 2 of the Act above quoted which provides that the owner of any horse, cattle, goat, sheep, or hogs, which trespass on any grounds enclosed with lawful fences, shall pajr such damages as shall be awarded by the fence-viewers; but it must be noted that in order to make the owners liable for damages to be awarded by the fence-viewers, the trespass by such animals must be *330 upon grounds enclosed with lawful fences. And said Section further provides in dealing with the question of unruly animals that it must appear that they break through lawful fences in order to make the owner liable, after notice thereof, for double damages to be awarded by the fence-viewers, for trespass committed by such animals.

Neither Section 1 of the Act above quoted defining a lawful fence, nor Section 2 of the Act above quoted, making the owner of any horse, cattle, goat, sheep, or hogs, which shall trespass on any grounds enclosed with lawful fences, liable for damages to be awarded by the fence-viewers, make any provision for the appointment of fence-viewers to award said damages.

It is Section 3 of the Act above quoted, which provides that the Court of General Sessions shall annually appoint a sufficient number of persons in each Hundred to be fence-viewers, making said fence-viewers the sole judges of the sufficiency of any fences, of the charges of making or repairing partitions, or other fences, and how borne and of damages by animals trespassing. This Section of the Act making said fence-viewers the sole judges of the sufficiency of any fences, means lawful fences as provided for in Section 1 of the Act above quoted; or making them the sole judges of making or repairing partition fences as provided for in Section 4 of the Act, being paragraph 4176 of the Code, means lawful fences as provided for in Section 1 of the Act above quoted; or making them the sole judges of damages by animals trespassing means animals trespassing on any ground enclosed with lawful fences, as referred to in Section 2 of the Act above quoted. If this were not true, there would be nothing to guide the fence-viewers in determining what constitutes the sufficiency of any fence or under what circumstances they were to determine the damages caused by animals trespassing.

Reading these sections of the Act together, as we *331 are entitled to do in order to determine its true meaning, it seems clear that the fence-viewers provided for by Section 3 of the Act aforesaid, are only to determine the damages caused by animals trespassing on grounds enclosed with lawful fences.

The complaint filed in this case does not disclose that the plaintiffs’ lands upon which the defendant permitted his bull to go, and cause damage to the plaintiffs’ registered cows, ■were lands enclosed with lawful fences, consequently the question of awarding damages is not within the province of the fence-viewers.

In the case of Draper v. Draper, 3 Harr. 65, an action was brought before a Justice of the Peace to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff when the defendant’s cattle broke down fences and destroyed three acres of corn. The Justice rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $40 and a certiorari was taken to the Superior Court. The Court reversed the judgment holding that Justices had no jurisdiction without the intervention of fence-viewers in cases of trespass by horses, cattle, sheep and hogs breaking through fences and damaging crops. The record plainly states that the cattle that destroyed the plaintiff’s corn, broke down fences, consequently the case does not support the defendant’s contention. In speaking of the jurisdiction of the Justice of the Peace without the intervention of fence-viewers, in action of trespass by cattle breaking through fences and destroying or damaging crops, the Court said:

“The law on this subject is designed to fix a uniform rule in relation to the quality and sufficiency of fences, and to require of every man the use of due precaution and care to prevent trespasses by cattle. Its policy is not merely the protection of crops, but the encouragement also of the production of stock. It makes the owner of cattle liable for their trespasses in the enclosure of others, not as he would be liable for his own trespass, but only in *332

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 A.2d 787, 45 Del. 326, 6 Terry 326, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-pleasanton-delsuperct-1950.