Bly v. McAllister

364 P.2d 500, 58 Wash. 2d 709, 1961 Wash. LEXIS 360
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 1961
Docket35720
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 364 P.2d 500 (Bly v. McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bly v. McAllister, 364 P.2d 500, 58 Wash. 2d 709, 1961 Wash. LEXIS 360 (Wash. 1961).

Opinion

Hill, J.

This case poses the question of whether negligence is a necessary element in establishing the liability of the owner of livestock for their trespass upon the land of another in a “stock restricted area.” The question arises in consequence of the depredations of a Hereford bull in a herd of registered Aberdeen Angus.

To a court harassed with urgent constitutional problems relating to urban renewal, racial discrimination, financing of toll bridges, due process, and when the right to counsel begins, this is a pastoral interlude. However, there being a substantial backlog of opinions waiting to be written, we shall resist temptation and essay no rhetorical flights of fancy as we assay the legal problem confronting us.

In pastures directly across a county road from each other were the thirty-four registered Aberdeen Angus cows and heifers, together with a bull, and a herd of seventy com *710 mercial Hereford cows and three bulls. The Aberdeen Angus herd belonged to the plaintiff; the Hereford herd to the defendants. The pastures were enclosed with barbed wire fences.

The fences were found down at a place directly across the road from each other. No one saw which bull went through which fence, or where the bulls fought, but it is undisputed that one of the defendants’ Hereford bulls was found in the plaintiff’s pasture.

While differing inferences may be drawn from the testimony, we shall accept for the purposes of this opinion the plaintiff’s theory that the defendants’ bellicose Hereford bull broke out of the defendants’ pasture and into the plaintiff’s and there fought with the latter’s Aberdeen Angus bull. We can assume, too, that the Hereford was the aggressor and that the Aberdeen Angus withdrew from the affray, after sustaining grievous injuries which necessitated his subsequent destruction (to the plaintiff’s damage, it is claimed, in the sum of three thousand dollars). We assume, further, that it is established that there were seven “ill-bred calves” (to use the plaintiff’s expression) born to his registered Aberdeen Angus cows and heifers, in consequence of the Hereford bull’s trespass in the plaintiff’s pasture, to his further claimed damage in the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars.

It was urged by the defendants that they and the plaintiff had exchanged the right to the use of certain lands, for the purpose of making it possible to pasture their respective herds, without having them in adjoining fields; and it was agreed that their herds would not be pastured adjacent to each other. Whether such a contract was made was submitted to the jury, as was the question whether, if made, either the plaintiff or defendants violated it. The jury was instructed that if the defendants had violated such a contract, they were liable for any damages sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of the breach; and, on the other hand, if the plaintiff had violated the contract and the damage complained of occurred in consequence of that breach, the plaintiff could not recover.

*711 There were no exceptions to the instructions on the contract theory, and no assignments of error with reference thereto. If the jury decided the case on the basis that the plaintiff had violated his contract, we would not need to consider the issue now before the court; but, there having been no interrogatories as to the basis of the jury’s verdict, there remains the possibility that the jury concluded there was no contract, or no violation, and reached its verdict for the defendants on the basis that they were not negligent, which brings us to the issue raised on this appeal: Is it enough to prove that cattle were running at large in a stock restricted area in order to fasten liability for their trespasses on the owner, or must it be established that he negligently allowed them to run at large?

At common law, the burden was on the owner of domestic animals, such as cattle, to restrain them within his own enclosure. If they trespassed upon the land of another, whether enclosed by fence or not, the trespass was actionable and without regard to fault on the part of the owner of the cattle. Kobayashi v. Strangeway (1911), 64 Wash. 36, 38, 116 Pac. 461; 2 Am. Jur. 768 (Animals), § 103.

However, in the western United States, where vast unsettled areas were ideal for open range purposes, such a rule would have been impracticable. The burden, with respect to domestic animals, was reversed for reasons explained in Kobayashi v. Strangeway, supra (p. 41), where we said:

“Our fencing statute was originally adopted in 1863 when Washington was a territory. It must be construed with reference to conditions which then prevailed and called it into existence. It is common knowledge that, at the times it was originally enacted and subsequently amended, the territory was sparsely settled; that its public domain was broad and extensive; that private property was less extensive; that public lands were generally used as a vast range for cattle and other stock; that it was more feasible for owners of private property to fence out and exclude cattle pastured upon the public domain, than it was for the owners of such cattle to comply with the common law rule of preventing them from trespassing upon uninclosed private lands. ...”

*712 With the passing of much of the open range, and the development in many areas of diversified farming, we have had a succession of acts, since 1905 1 , designed to give protection in certain areas against livestock running at large. The forerunner of the present act, providing for the creation of districts in which livestock are not to be permitted to run at large, was chapter 25 of the Laws of 1911. We are presently concerned with an amendatory statute (Laws of 1937, chapter 40) which eliminated the requirement for a petition by residents for the creation of such a district and gave the county commissioners authority to initiate the creation of stock restricted areas with the significant proviso that:

“. . . All territory not so designated shall be range área, in which it shall be lawful to permit livestock to run at large.” RCW 16.24.010; Laws of 1937, c. 40, § 1.

A new section was added, by the 1937 act, which reads:

“No person owning or in control of any livestock shall willfully or negligently allow such livestock to run at large in any stock restricted area, nor shall any person owning or in control of any livestock allow such livestock to wander or stray upon the right of way of any public highway lying within a stock restricted area when not in the charge of some person.” RCW 16.24.065; Laws of 1937, c. 40, § 6.

Our consideration of all the pertinent statutes makes it appear conclusive that this statute lays down a general rule applicable to all livestock, within a stock restricted area, and makes it unlawful to willfully or negligently allow any livestock to run at large in any stock restricted area.

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.2d 500, 58 Wash. 2d 709, 1961 Wash. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bly-v-mcallister-wash-1961.