Johnson v. Rickford

122 N.W. 386, 18 N.D. 268, 1909 N.D. LEXIS 44
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 N.W. 386 (Johnson v. Rickford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Rickford, 122 N.W. 386, 18 N.D. 268, 1909 N.D. LEXIS 44 (N.D. 1909).

Opinion

Ellsworti-i, J.

As cause of action the plaintiff and respondent alleges: That on and prior to December, 1905, she owned about 70 tons of hay stacked upon a tract of land in Griggs county, which •hay was protected by a good and sufficient fence; that during the months of December, 1905, and of January and February, 1906, live stock belonging to the defendant and appellant broke through said fence and destroyed hay belonging to plaintiff to the amount of 10 tons and of the value of $50; that during said period plaintiff repeatedly repaired the fence in question and notified defendant that his animals were destroying her hay, and on the 12th day of February, 1906, caused notice to be served on defendant of the damage occasioned by his stock, and the probable amount thereof. The answer of defendant and appellant denies generally the claim for damages of plaintiff, and as matter of defense alleges that at all times during the months of December, 1905, and of January and / February, 1906, his stock were licensed by statute to run at large, and that plaintiff had not protected her hay by any proper or legal fence, as prescribed by the laws of this state. The action was originally brought in justice court of Griggs county, and from a judgment entered therein in favor of plaintiff, an appeal was taken by the defendant and appellant to the district court of the Fifth judicial district for Griggs county, and from a judgment entered therein in favor of plaintiff, an appeal was taken by the defendant and appellant to the district court of the Fifth judicial district for Griggs county. In November, 1907, the action came on for trial in the district court and was tried to a jury. It then appeared, from the evidence introduced, that in the winter of the year 1905-6, plaintiff and respondent had two stacks of hay, containing, as she estimated, about 70 tons, placed upon a certain tract of land in Griggs county. 'Whether the land on which the stacks were placed belonged to plaintiff does not appear. She surrounded the stacks by a fence constructed by placing cedar posts 17 or 18 feet apart; and placing thereon four barbed wires', the first wire 16 inches from the ground, and the others above it at'intervals of from 8 to 10 inches. This fence was placed at an uneven distance from the stacks; at some points being from 1 to 2 rods distant, and at others approaching to within 5 feet and. 8 or ten inches of the sides of the stacks. At these points it appears, according to the statement of one of the witnesses for plaintiff, that the hay could be reached from outside the fence by “a good strong bull or cow with a long [271]*271neck, if he was hungry,” by putting his head between the wires and stretching them as far as the posts permitted.

It seems that cattle belonging to the defendant, at a number of times in the months mentioned, broke through this fence and destroyed some of the hay stacked in the inclosure. At another time the snow drifted about a portion of the fence until it reached above all the wires except one. As the snow was hard packed, some of the cattle walked upon the top of the drift and over the top wire of the fence and reached the hay in this way. After plaintiff found that stock was breaking into the inclosure about her haystacks, she had stays placed between the posts at a distance of about eight feet apart. When the snow accumulated so that the animals could walk over the top of the fence, she had it removed, or the crust broken so that the fence could not be passed, except by breaking it. There is also evidence that plaintiff on several occasions notified members of the family of appellant that his stock was breaking over her fence and destroying her hay. It further appeared that the dwelling of appellant was less than one-half mile distant from the haystacks in question, and that appellant was accustomed, during the period in question, to turn his stock out upon his own premises, which adjoined those of plaintiff, to run at large or “range” upon surrounding uninclosed lands. One witness testified that, during the winter of 1905-06, he saw- a path in the snow made by stock, which started from appellant’s yard and went directly to the haystacks of plaintiff. None of the witnesses had at any time seen appellant drive his stock along this path or by any other route upon plaintiff’s premises or to her haystacks, and had not seen him or any of his employes driving his stock away from plaintiff’s stacks. It further appeared upon the trial that there had not been held in Griggs county an election by which the provisions of section 1933, Rev. Codes 1905, or of chapter 44, Code Civ. Proc. (Rev. Codes 1905, §§ 7865-7871), had been abolished within that county.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant moved the court to direct the jury to find a verdict for the defendant upon the ground “that the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action against the defendant, as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, or otherwise, and upon the further ground that the evidence in the case does not establish any liability on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff, under the facts and circumstances shown by the evidence or alleged in plaintiff’s complaint.” This motion being denied by [272]*272the court, the defendant offered no evidence, and the court submitted the ca$e to the jury under an instruction that: “At the time it is alleged that this damage was done, it was lawful for stock to run at large, and during these months plaintiff was required to protect her haystacks against ranging horses, mules, cattle, and sheep.” And that it was “the duty of the plaintiff to use the ordinary precautions that common prudence would dictate to protect her property from destruction.” “The cattle of the defendant being lawfully at large in this state, the owner of the cattle would not be liable to the defendant, unless you believe- from the evidence in this case that he drove them, or caused them to be driven, willfully onto the hay of plaintiff. The law does not contemplate that a person who allows his cattle to run at large under the law, will willfully drive them onto another person’s grain or hay and winter them there. That is -not the intent of the law, and this is the only condition under which you can find for the plaintiff in this case.” The court further instructed the jury that the provisions of law contained in section 1939, Rev. Codes 1905, which has been referred to by counsel in this case, “does not apply in this county, so you are instructed by the court that the law in this suit does not and did not, require the plaintiff to have the fence which was mentioned in the Code, as 'having posts set eight feet apart.” The jury returned a verdict fixing the amount of plaintiff’s damage at $40. Whereupon judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against appellant for that sum, -and from such judgment this appeal is taken.

It has long been a settled rule of law in this state that both the common-law principle that the owner of stock is liable in damages for any trespass by them upon the lands of another, whether fenced or not fenced, as well as the statute declatory of this principle (section 7865, Rev. Codes 1905) has, by the provision of section 1933, Rev. Codes 1905, been abrogated in this state so far as it relates to any such trespass committed between the 1st day of December and the 1st day of April, except in those counties in which the provisions of section 1933 have been abolished by the voters of the county at an election duly held for that purpose. Ely v. Rosholt, 11 N. D. 559, 93 N. W. 864.

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178 N.W. 195 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 N.W. 386, 18 N.D. 268, 1909 N.D. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-rickford-nd-1909.