Galloway v. Brown

93 So. 2d 459, 230 Miss. 471, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 390
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1957
DocketNo. 40422
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 So. 2d 459 (Galloway v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galloway v. Brown, 93 So. 2d 459, 230 Miss. 471, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 390 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

On the 3rd day of March, 1955, the appellant, C. H. Galloway, Sr., filed in the Circuit Court of Madison County an affidavit in replevin to obtain the immediate possession of 9 head of cattle, separately valued but of the total value of $422.50, which cattle he alleged were [479]*479being wrongfully detained by the appellees Floyd T. Brown and J. Leland Brown. Pursuant to the said affidavit a writ of replevin was issued and placed in the hands of the deputy sheriff for execution.

The cattle of the appellant were trespassing upon the lands of the appellees and it is stipulated in the record herein that the adjoining lands of the appellant and those of the appellees are within the area where the state-wide stock law is in full force and effect, as provided for under Section 4864, Code of 1942.

The deputy sheriff was accompanied on the lands of the appellees by the appellant, his son, and some Negro helpers for the purpose of assisting the deputy in the execution of the writ of replevin, and whereunto they had been duly deputized on account of the fact that Mr. Galloway’s cattle were wild to the extent of being difficult to corral and take into possession while grazing in the pasture of the appellees along with about 175 to 200 head of their cattle.

During the day when the writ was being executed there were a total of 23 head of cattle belonging to Mr. Galloway trespassing on the pasture land and oat crop of the appellees. These 23 head of cattle were corralled into an enclosure with some of the cattle of the appellees, but only the 9 head described in the affidavit and writ of replevin on March 3, 1955, were delivered into the possession of the plaintiff in replevin upon his execution of a bond therefor on the date this writ was served, the appellees being unwilling for the possession of the other 14 head to be delivered to the plaintiff without another writ of replevin for them. Consequently on the next day, March 4, 1955, another replevin suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Madison County for the recovery of the immediate possession of the additional 14 head of cattle found in the pasture and oat crop of the appellees. In the additional writ of replevin [480]*480the cattle were separately valued and alleged to be of the total value of $635.50.

The suit for the 9 head of cattle seized on March 3, 1955, is styled as case No. 9972, and the suit for the remaining 14 head of cattle which were seized on March 4 or 5, 1955, is styled as case No. 9973 on the docket of the Circuit Court of Madison County. By agreement of the parties the two suits were consolidated and tried as one. As a result of the trial the jury fixed the separate value of each head of the cattle in the first group of 9 the same as the value fixed in the affidavit, writ of replevin, and in the sheriff’s return, and of the total value of $422.50, and likewise fixed the value of each of the 14 head in the second group, and as being of the total valne of $635.50.

The judgment then ordered that the plainitff C. IT. Galloway, Sr, as principal, and J. E. Borer and Eugene Wiggins, sureties, on the bond in Case No. 9972, restore the cattle described in that case to the defendants Floyd T. Brown and J. Leland Brown, or pay them the value thereof, to-wit $422.50, “as assessed by the verdict of the jury, the same amount being the value, as assessed by the jury of defendants’ interest in said cattle under their lien for damages”, and the judgment further ordered that the plaintiff C. H. Galloway, Sr., and W. T. Kernop and Mrs. IT. G. Hawkins, sureties on his bond, restore the 14 head of cattle listed and described in Case No. 9973 to the defendants Floyd T. Brown and J. Leland Brown or pay them the value thereof in the sum of $635.50, “as assessed by the verdict of the jury, the same amouiit being the value, as assessed by the jury, of the defendants’ interest in said cattle under their lien for damages”. The judgment then ordered that “the plaintiff C. H. Galloway, Sr., pay to the said defendants Floyd T. Brown and J. Leland Brown the additional sum of $436.18, the total amount of this judgment being $1,494.18, being the damages assessed by the [481]*481jury; * * Neither the instructions to the jury nor the judgment entered limited appellees’ recovery to the amount of their “lien” against the cattle for the amount of any such damages. The verdict of the jury makes no mention of the additional sum of $436.18 and this amount can be arrived at only by subtracting the total value of all of the cattle, as fixed by the jury, from the sum of $1,494.18, the total amount of the verdict.

Section 4864, Code of 1942, provides in effect that where the state-wide stock law governs, any person owning or having under control any livestock shall not permit them to run at large upon the open or unfenced lands of another person. (Italics ours).

Thus it will be seen that all of the testimony in regard to whether or not the fence of the defendants was in a good state of repair was immaterial on the issue of whether or not they held a lien on the cattle of the plaintiff for such damages as they may have sustained by reason of the trespassing of the plaintiff’s cattle on their pasture and crops. Where the state-wide stock law is in full force and effect, the owner of livestock is required to keep them under a safe enclosure of his own, without regard to whether or not other landowners in the stock law district have a sufficient fence, or any fence at all, around their crops of cotton, corn, oats or other such pasture crops; he must rely on the strength of his own fence and not depend upon the insufficiency of his neighbor’s fence.

Section 4870, Code of 1942, provides, among other things, that any livestock as referred to in Section 4864, supra, “found running at large upon the lands of any other person than the owner or custodian of such stock may be taken up by any sheriff, constable, marshal, or other peace officer of the state within his territorial jurisdiction, and confined within a safe enclosure. * * * And the charges for so taking up and confining, together with any damage done by said stock, if any, shall be a special, [482]*482first and paramount lien upon said livestock, and unless same are paid by the owner, or person having such livestock under his control, when so notified, such livestock shall be sold as estrays, and the cost of taking- up and confining, and damages, if any, together with other costs and expenses, shall first be deducted, and the balance, if any, shall be paid to the owner or person having-such livestock under his control, * * V’

Section 4871, Code of 1942, provides: “Every owner of such livestock shall be liable for damages for all injuries and trespasses committed by such animals by breaking and entering into or upon the lands, grounds, or premises of another person; and the person injured shall have a lien upon the animal, or animals, trespassing for all such damage. The damages for such trespass shall not be less than 50 cents for each horse, cow or hog, and 25 cents for each of the other kinds of stock; and for every succeeding offense, after the owner has been notified of the first trespass or injury, double damages shall be recovered with costs. For breaking- or entering into a pasture or waste ground, however, double damages shall not be recoverable, and the damages in such cases may be assessed as low as 40 cents for each horse, cow or hog and 20 cents for each of the other kinds of live stock.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 So. 2d 459, 230 Miss. 471, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-brown-miss-1957.