Johnson v. McConnell

22 P. 219, 80 Cal. 545, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 956
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1889
DocketNo. 13120
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 P. 219 (Johnson v. McConnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. McConnell, 22 P. 219, 80 Cal. 545, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 956 (Cal. 1889).

Opinions

Works, J.

This action was brought by the appellant against the respondent to recover the value of three dogs alleged to have been maliciously killed by the latter. The respondent admitted the killing, but justified it on the ground that the dogs were at the time in the act of worrying sheep belonging to his mother and in his charge. As to the fact tending to show such justification, the court found as follows: —

[547]*547“On the first day of February, 1887, the defendant was in the employment of his mother, Mrs. Ellen M. Wilson, and engaged in attending to and earing fqr the sheep upon the ranch, in Sacramento County. A portion of said sheep consisted of a band of ewes, about three hundred in number, which were at the time heavy with lamb, and had been segregated from the rest of the sheep and put in a field by themselves for the purpose of giving them more careful attention and protection during the lambing season. This field was at the time a part of Mrs. Wilson’s land and in her possession, and it was some three miles from the residence of the plaintiff.
“On the date named, defendant, while at some distance from said field, discovered said ewes running about the field, followed by three or four dogs, which seemed to be chasing them. Thinking said sheep in danger, the defendant immediately went to his house, a quarter of a mile distant, and procuring a repeating rifle, returned to said field. He found the ewes still running about the field in a greatly agitated and frightened manner, pursued by four dogs, which were apparently worrying and injuring them; and the defendant, thinking that said ewes were being so -worried and injured and in danger of being killed by said dogs, at once proceeded to and did shoot and kill three of said dogs. That is to say, defendant immediately started after said dogs, when the latter, perceiving him enter the field, turned and ran, when defendant pursued and shot three of them in quick succession, and as soon as he could get in range of them, but not until they had gotten something like a quarter to a half mile from where defendant first started after them. None of the dogs -were on the land or premises of the plaintiff when killed.”

The court further found that the defendant had never seen the dogs, and did not know to whom they belonged; that he killed them because he believed that it was the [548]*548only effectual method of preventing them from returning and injuring the sheep, and not with any malicious or wrongful intent or feeling; that the effect of the chasing of the sheep was to greatly worry and injure them, which was known to defendant when he pursued and killed the dogs; that they were in fact injured and worried thereby; that the plaintiff was the owner of the dogs; that they were never known to molest sheep before this; that they were valuable hunting dogs, trained and educated, and were worth $225.

On these findings the court concluded in favor of the defendant, and rendered judgment accordingly.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was denied, and he appeals.

It is extremely doubtful, from the evidence, whether the dogs were in fact chasing or worrying the sheep at all, or whether they were not hunting in the field where the sheep were, and thereby frightened them, and the court below does not find that they were, but that they seemed to be chasing them, and were apparently worrying and injuring them, and that the defendant believed that they were so doing, and believed at the time of killing them that it was the only effectual method of preventing them from returning and injuring the sheep. There is no finding that the dogs were in fact worrying the sheep, or that the defendant had reasonable cause to believe they were, except so far as this may be inferred from the finding that they were apparently doing so.

Our code provides: “Any person, on finding any dog or dogs not on the premises of its owner or possessor, worrying, wounding, or killing any sheep, Angora or Cashmere goats, may, at the time of so finding said dog or dogs, kill the same, and the owner or owners thereof shall sustain no action for damages against any person so killing such dog or dogs.” (Civ. Code, sec. 3341, subd. 2.)

Dogs are property for the malicious destruction or [549]*549injury of which an action for damages will lie. (1 Sutherland on Damages, 802; State v. McDuffie, 34 N. H. 523; 69 Am. Dec. 516; Dodson v. Mock, 4 Dev. & B. 146; 32 Am. Dec. 677; Wheatly v. Harris, 4 Sneed, 468; 70 Am. Dec. 258, and note.) At common law and in some of the states they are not the subject of larceny. (State v. Doe, 79 Ind.9; Ward v. State,48 Ala.161.) But even in those states it is held that they are the subject of a criminal prosecution for malicious trespass. (State v. Doe, supra; Kinsman v. State, 77 Ind. 132; Parker v. Mise, 27 Ala. 480; 62 Am. Dec. 777; Ward v. State, supra.) In this state they are declared to be property, and made the subjects of larceny. (Pen. Code, sec. 491.) And while it has been said that they have nearly always been held “ to be entitled to less regard and- protection than more harmless domestic animals,” it'is equally true that there are no other domestic animals to which the owner or his family can become more strongly attached, or the loss of which will be more keenly felt.

As to these dogs the plaintiff testified:—

“These dogs were trained animals; the setter was trained by a regular dog-trainer, Mr. Schultius; the setter dog was a good retriever. If I dropped anything, I could send him back for it any ordinary distance,—half a mile or so. If I left my coat on the other side of the field when I went to dinner, he would bring it to me. He encouraged my greyhounds to go out and hunt rabbits, and would start the rabbits for the greyhound; he was a good deer-dog, just as well trained as a deer-dog, and would drive deer in the direction of the hunter. He would go around them and bring them up to where I was when I was out hunting with him.
“The St. Bernard was a good watch-dog. He went with my children, and took care of them almost like a human being; he would go with the other dogs, and if they caught a rabbit close he would bring it to the house. I have known him to bring as high as two or three in one [550]*550day to the house. My boys could pack anything on him if they were out; if they killed more game than they could pack, they would pack it onto his back.
“The greyhound was a fast dog; we had him trained. We had trained him to go with the other dogs and catch the rabbits, and protect our vineyards. In the country where I live there are a great many rabbits,—jackass rabbits they are called; these animals are very destructive to vineyards; they would eat'the young vines, and entirely destroy vineyards; before I got my dogs, my vines were almost entirely destroyed in a single year. I replanted my vineyard, and I got these dogs, and they run and destroyed rabbits to such an extent that I could hardly find a rabbit within half a mile of my place.”

While it should be the policy of the law to protect the flocks of the sheep-owner, such dogs as these should not be killed without good cause.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P. 219, 80 Cal. 545, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-mcconnell-cal-1889.