Grise v. State

37 Ark. 456
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 Ark. 456 (Grise v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grise v. State, 37 Ark. 456 (Ark. 1881).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

1. Indictment for MALS: Allegavalue Sr SníecSe s - The appellant was indicted, under an Act, ih 11th, 1879, “For the prevention of cruelty to animals.” The first section, inter alia, makes it a misany # approved March 11th, 1879, “For the prevention of cruelty 1 demeanor to “ needlessly mutilate or kill” * living creature.” The indictment simply charges that appellant did, unlawfully and needlessty, kill a hog, of the value No allegations of of five dollars, being a living creature, value, or of ownership, were essential.

The proof, on the part of the State, tended to show that appellant had killed a pig, belonging to a neighbor, by a blow on the head with a stick, producing sudden death. The pig was in a field belonging to appellant, in which corn and wheat were growing. It had, before that time, been in the habit of trespassing there with others, and the defendant had repeatedly applied to the owner, a lady, to pen her hogs, or keep them out of his field. This, for a while, she did. But they were again turned out, and the one in question being found again in appellant’s field, he killed it on the spot — with no more circumstances of cruelty than would attend the taking of life at one blow.

On defendant’s part, the proof — besides that the pig had been several times in.the field, eating corn and wheat— tended further to show that it was a very small one, which could easily get between the rails of any ordinary country fence, and that there was around that field a veiy good fence.

There was proof; on both sides, as to the value, and some tending to show that appellant had paid the value to the owner — all of which was entirely irrelevant, save as it might, as part of the res gestee, show the purpose, or motive, of the killing. Payment to the owner could not atone it, if it were needless in the sense of the Statute, nor would failure to make compensation aggravate the offense.

Upon the trial, defendant asked six instructions, which were refused throughout. In lieu thereof, the court gave two of its own motion — all against objection. The defendant was found guilty, and sentenced to a fine of two dollars. He moved for a new trial upon the grounds of ei’ror, in refusing the instructions asked; in giving those by the-court of its own motion; and because the verdict was against law and evidence. The motion was refused, and he appealed.

This court is called for the first time to construe a new-statute, belonging to a class which must ever be more or less vague in their meaning, and extremely difficult of administration. They are the outgrowth of modern sentiment, and are of comparatively recent origin. They attempt-to transcend what had been thought, at common law, the practical limits of municipal government. They spring, originally, from tentative efforts of the New England colonists to enforce imperfect but well recognized moral obligations ; a thing much more practical in small isolated communities than in populous governments. They first had in view only to compel benevolence and mercy to those useful animals, which being domesticated, and wasting their lives in man’s service, were supposed to be entitled to his kind and humane consideration. Such statutes appealed strongly to the instincts of humanity. They were adopted in many of the States, and recently in England ; and the impulse which favored them has endeavored to enlarge their beneficence, until, in our law they are made to embrace “ all living creatures.” It is obvious that laws of this class, pressed to this extreme limit, must be handled by the courts with great care, and we feel it due the Legislature to do so, to prevent their becoming dead letters. They must be rationally construed with reference to their true spirit and intention. It must be kept in mind that they are not directed at all to the usual objects of municipal law, as laid down by Blackstone. For example : They are not made for the protection of the absolute or relative rights of pei’sons, or the rights of men to the acquisition and enjoyment of property, or the peace of society. They seem to recognize and attempt to protect some abstract rights in all that animate creation, made subject to man by the creation, from the largest and noblest to the smallest and most insignificant. The rights of persons and the security of property and the public peace, are all protected by other-laws, with appropriate sanctions. The objects of the two classes should not be confounded. It will lead to hopeless confusion. The peculiar legislation we are now called to-discuss must be considered wholly irrespective of property,, or of the public peace, or of the inconveniences of nuisances. The misdemeanors attempted to be defined may be as welL perpetrated upon a man’s own property as another’s,, or upon creatures, the property of no one, and so far asoné act is concerned, it is all the same whether the acts be-done amongst refined men and women, whose sensibilities would be shocked, or in the solitude of closed rooms or secluded forests.

It is in this view that such acts are to be construed, to give-them, if possible, some beneficent effect, without running into such absurdities as would, iu the end, make them mere dead letters. A literal construction of them would have that effect. Society, for instance, could not long tolerate a system of laws, which might drag to the criminal bar, every lady who might impale a butterfly, or every man who might drown a litter of kittens, to answer there, and show that the act was-needful. Such laws must be rationally considered, with reference to their objects, not as the means of preventing' aggressions upon property, otherwise unlawful; nor so as to-involve absurd consequences, which the Legislature cannot be supposed to have intended. So construed, this class of laws may be found useful in elevating humanity, by enlargement of its sympathy with all God’s creatures, and thus society may be improved. Although results in other States- and in England, have not, as we judge from the paucity of decisions, been such, as to excite sanguine hopes, yet to a limited extent the objects of the laws may be practically-obtained. It is the duty of the courts to co-operate to that-end, so far as the rules of construction may warrant.

2. Burden ■to eii°i4oS ter of act- There are civil laws for the recovery of damages for trespass, and criminal laws for the punishment of malicious mischief, and trespass and injury to property. In a suit'or indictment, under these, there are appropriate defenses, not applicable to an indictment for cruelty or for needless killing. They should, one or the other of them, have been resorted to by the individual, or the State, if the object had been to recover damages for the loss of the pig, or to protect societj’" from violent aggressions on property. The law under which this indictment was framed has no such object, and cannot be made a substitute for the others. The issue was, did the defendant needlessly kill the pig. The burden of proof was upon the State to show not only the killing, but 1 _ J ° that it was done under such circumstances as, unexplained, would authorize the jury to believe that it was needless in the sense of the Statute. The controversy does not turn at all upon the lawful ness or unlawful ness of the act, except in so far as the Statute itself might make it unlawful as needless.

S. Co ustruet ion of file slatute. Me ailing ■of “needlessly.”

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ark. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grise-v-state-ark-1881.