Moss v. Mississippi Live Stock Sanitary Board

122 So. 776, 154 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 176
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1929
DocketNo. 27739.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 So. 776 (Moss v. Mississippi Live Stock Sanitary Board) 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
Moss v. Mississippi Live Stock Sanitary Board, 122 So. 776, 154 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 176 (Mich. 1929).

Opinions

The appellants, B.L. Moss and seven other farmers residing in Jones and Jasper counties, exhibited their bill in the chancery court of Jasper county against the Mississippi live stock sanitary board and the officers thereof, praying for a temporary injunction restraining *Page 770 appellee from in any way interfering with appellants' live stock, and restraining and enjoining appellee from undertaking to trespass upon appellants' premises for the purpose of inspecting and dipping their live stock, and from in any way interfering with appellants' liberty and their right to full and complete enjoyment of their live stock, and to enjoin appellee from enforcing the rules and regulations, and requiring appellants to carry their cattle and live stock to the dipping vats at Stringer, or to any other place, at unreasonable times and unreasonable distances.

A temporary injunction was directed to be issued as prayed for, and, by agreement of the parties, the cause came on to be heard in vacation. Proof was taken on the issue presented by the bill on the merits, and the injunction was dissolved; five hundred dollars attorney fees were assessed against the appellants as damages for the wrongful suing out of the injunction; and the bill was finally dismissed, hence this appeal.

The bill alleged that appellants were property owners in Jones and Jasper counties, owning real estate in Jasper county upon which they kept mules, horses, and cattle; that Moss was the owner of eighteen head of mules which he used in farming every day, plowing and cultivating crops; that at that season of the year his mules were very necessary in carrying on his business of farming; that it was a busy farming season when the bill was filed, July 3, 1927, requiring the cultivation of crops every day and that one omitted day in the cultivation of said crops would entail great loss; that the said Moss cared for his mules, kept them free of ticks and other vermin; that his mules were no menace to any one in the way of conveying any kind of contagious or infectious diseases or spreading the cattle or tick fever in Mississippi, and that his mules were used by him in and about his farm work. *Page 771

It was further alleged in the bill that the live stock sanitary board was engaged in undertaking to eradicate the Texas fever tick from Mississippi under chapter 264, Laws of 1926; that appellee had built dipping vats in Jasper county filled with an arsenical solution very poisonous in its nature and dangerous to live stock, unless weather conditions are right, and unless the solution is properly prepared and mixed; and that in said vats they propose to dip all kinds of live stock, including horses, mules, and cattle.

Appellant B.L. Moss, and other appellants, further allege that they lived about six miles from the nearest dipping vat, and that in the month of July, when the busy crop season was on, the regulations requiring them to carry stock to the dipping vat that distance are unreasonable, and that their mules were not then, and never have been, infected with the cattle tick.

There was further exhibit to the bill, viz., a notice, a copy of which was delivered to each of the appellants, directing them to dip their live stock at a dipping vat provided, on July 5th to July 8th, and regularly each two weeks thereafter until further notified, and advising the owners that their cattle, horses, mules, jacks, and jennets on their premises were infected with ticks (Margaropus annulatus), or were exposed to such infection, and this notice was signed by R.V. Rafnael, state veterinarian, by J.E. McCarty, live stock inspector.

The bill set up that all of the appellants will suffer irreparable injury by the enforcement of said rules and regulations, and incur great loss of property and endanger the lives of their stock, and lose a great many days from work, if they should comply with such rules and regulations of the live stock sanitary board.

The live stock sanitary board gave notice through the newspaper that all owners would be required to bring *Page 772 their stock to the vats and have them dipped, and to have them dipped every two weeks thereafter until notified.

The appellants alleged that this requirement would violate their constitutional rights, and, if carried out, would cause irreparable damage and injury, and that the live stock sanitary board was not liable in a civil action, and that appellants had no redress in a court of law. Appellants then set out section 3 of said act, alleging that this law is void and unconstitutional, and state in their bill that they were ready and willing to dip their live stock at all reasonable times and all reasonable places when the same should be reasonably necessary for the eradication of the cattle tick. Appellants further alleged that, if the appellee carries out its regulations, as it has been threatening to do, and was undertaking to do, the constitutional rights of appellants with reference to their freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, and their constitutional rights with reference to the rights of property guaranteed under the Constitution, and their rights as to freedom from all unlawful arrests and freedom in their use of their property, will be violated, and their property destroyed.

In addition to the prayer for a temporary injunction, they prayed that the injunction be made perpetual.

The appellee answered the bill, asserting that it was the duty of Moss and the other citizens to obey and uphold the law, and that it was the duty of the live stock sanitary board to enforce the law, admitting that they were undertaking to enforce and carry out the plan for the eradication of the Texas fever tick in Mississippi, and that they had not been charged with the doing of any act that is not within their official duty and not mandatorily required of them by the law; allege the blowing up of a dipping vat in the immediate neighborhood without charging that appellants participated therein; deny that the live stock of the appellants was not infected with *Page 773 cattle fever tick, and said that they would never be free from the tick until the dipping law was carried into effect. Appellee denied that the law requiring cattle, horses and mules to be dipped every fourteen days was unreasonable, and that the distance from the dipping vat was unreasonable, and denied that the dipping of the live stock would endanger their lives, safety, or health, and made its answer what it called a general demurrer in so far as the act was attacked in a constitutional way.

On proof, the appellants testified that they had looked their live stock and cattle over, and had taken good care of them, and that they did not have any Texas fever tick on them. The distance appellants would have to carry their stock to the dipping vat was shown to vary from three and nine-tenths to five and seven-tenths miles. Appellants and their witnesses testified that on some occasions some of the mules had been known to blister. They did not testify to any serious injuries accruing to any of the live stock within their knowledge from dipping them, and the veterinarian who testified both for appellants and appellee said that, when the solution was properly prepared, there would be no serious, or, in fact, no impairment of the health or impairment of the animals dipped. It was further shown that Jasper county was within the infested area, an area against which is maintained a quarantine by the United States government, being treated by the authorities of the state of Mississippi and of the United States as an infected and infested area with what is commonly called Texas cattle fever tick.

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Bluebook (online)
122 So. 776, 154 Miss. 765, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-mississippi-live-stock-sanitary-board-miss-1929.