Cramer v. Jenkins

255 P. 877, 82 Cal. App. 269, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 680
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3017.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 255 P. 877 (Cramer v. Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cramer v. Jenkins, 255 P. 877, 82 Cal. App. 269, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 680 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

Plaintiffs began this action to recover damages suffered by reason of trespass on lands leased by plaintiffs of certain sheep and cattle belonging to the defendant and recovered damages in the sum of $259.

The complaint is in three counts. No question is raised as to the judgment of the trial court awarding the plaintiff the sum of $34 on account of damages inflicted upon the premises leased to the plaintiffs by cattle belonging to the defendant. The argument of the appellant and all questions raised upon this appeal are directed to the alleged error of the trial court in awarding damages to the plaintiffs *Page 271 in the sum of $225 for pasturage destroyed upon the premises leased to the plaintiffs, by reason of the defendant permitting 600 head of sheep belonging to him to graze thereon.

The third count of the plaintiffs' complaint involved in this appeal, so far as pertinent hereto, is as follows:

"That on or about the 9th day of May, 1924, defendant permitted about six hundred ewes, together with lambs following them, to graze upon the SW. 1/4 of said Section 9, without having first obtained the consent of said owner or of the tenants in possession, Edward G. Cramer and John C. Cramer."

The premises described are premises previously alleged in the complaint to be under lease to the plaintiffs. The damages recovered under this allegation are the sum of $225. No demurrer was filed by the defendant and no question as to the sufficiency of this allegation of the complaint appears to have been raised in the trial court. The answer of the defendant, so far as pertinent to the issues involved herein, contains the following:

"As a further, separate and distinct defense . . ., defendant alleges that on the 9th day of May, 1923, defendant, through his agents and employees, was driving a band of sheep owned by the defendant on lands not owned or controlled by the plaintiffs, bordering lands then owned by the Cramer Livestock Company, a corporation of the state of California, and leased by the plaintiffs; that said lands of plaintiff were fenced with a wire fence and that the wires of said fence were so high that sheep could easily pass thereunder; that while defendant was so driving his sheep on said lands not belonging to, or leased by the plaintiffs, about 600 head of ewes and lambs went under said fence and onto a corner of said lands leased by said plaintiffs."

It is further alleged that the defendant attempted to drive his sheep from said premises, but that said sheep were driven by the plaintiffs therefrom and placed in a corral by the plaintiffs.

Upon the basis of this allegation it is argued that as the testimony shows that plaintiffs' lands were not inclosed by a lawful fence, as described by an act of the legislature of 1855 (Stats. 1855, p. 154), no liability rests upon the defendant *Page 272 for any injuries inflicted by his sheep upon crops growing upon the leased premises occupied and cultivated by the plaintiffs. Considerable testimony was introduced as to the character of the fence, constituting the inclosure of the plaintiffs' premises, sufficient to show that the fence so existing failed to comply in many particulars with the act of the legislature just referred to, but from the views herein expressed, the condition of the fence, or its failure to comply with the specifications set forth in the act of 1855, become immaterial.

The record shows that the plaintiffs and the defendant had leased from the Cramer Livestock Company adjoining premises; the plaintiffs leased premises suitable for cultivation, or which they were cultivating, the defendant had leased adjoining premises suitable for pasturage purposes, and which were being used by him for such purposes. The record shows that on or about the seventh day of May, 1924, the defendant's herders had herded and driven a band of sheep to and upon the premises adjoining the lands and premises belonging to the plaintiffs, and that while so doing, about 200 sheep passed under the fence in question on to the premises belonging to the plaintiffs, but the trial court held that no damage resulted from this incursion of the defendant's sheep. Following this, the record shows that on or about the ninth day of May, the herders employed by the defendant had in charge a band of sheep numbering some 1,200, brought them to within the vicinity of the plaintiffs' premises, where 200 from said band of sheep had made an incursion upon the lands leased by the plaintiffs two days previously; that the herders were moving said sheep over the premises leased by the defendant for pasturage purposes and in the direction of where the sheep might obtain water; that while so doing, about 600 of said sheep, in the language of the defendant's answer, "got away from the herders, went under said fence and onto the lands and premises leased and occupied by the plaintiffs," causing the damages found by the trial court. From this it is argued that the defendant is not liable on the ground, first: That the plaintiffs' premises were not inclosed by a lawful fence, and, second, that the court had nothing before it justifying a finding that the defendant permitted his sheep to graze upon the lands and premises leased by the *Page 273 plaintiffs. The recital of the facts, as above set forth gleaned from the record, shows that the defendant was herding his sheep upon adjoining premises; that two days previous to the infliction of the damages ascertained and assessed by the trial court, 200 of said band of sheep passed under the fence in question and on to the leased lands occupied by the plaintiffs; that the herders went upon the lands and premises and drove the sheep from the lands and premises belonging to the plaintiffs, under the wire fence referred to in this action; that notwithstanding this knowledge of the condition of the fence thus acquired on the seventh day of May, 1924, the herders employed by the defendant brought the same band of sheep to the same vicinity, where 600 of them went under the same fence and inflicted the damage complained of.

We feel that these facts show that the defendant's herders had full knowledge of the condition of the fence, of the propensity of sheep to forage upon the lands of the premises and that when they voluntarily brought a large band of sheep to the same vicinity on the ninth day of May, 1924, the trial court was justified in finding that the defendant permitted said sheep to graze upon the lands and premises leased by the plaintiffs, within the intent of the act of the legislature herein referred to. Knowing the condition of the fence, knowing what the sheep had previously done, the defendant's herders voluntarily brought the defendant's sheep to the same vicinity. It has been held in this state that when a band of sheep is in charge of herders, the sheep are not considered as running at large. (Spect v.Arnold, 52 Cal. 455; 2 Cal. Jur., p. 47, sec. 31.)

[1] It is argued upon appeal for the first time that the complaint in this action does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that there is no allegation that the premises leased by the plaintiffs were inclosed by a lawful fence, or that the defendant wrongfully or unlawfully permitted the sheep to be herded upon the premises leased by the plaintiffs or permitted them to be grazed upon the premises leased by the plaintiffs. As stated, no demurrer was interposed to the complaint, and if technically insufficient as against a demurrer, the record, taken as a whole, shows that the defendant has not been misled or suffered any prejudice on account thereof and, therefore, *Page 274

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 877, 82 Cal. App. 269, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-jenkins-calctapp-1927.