Phillips v. Oystee
This text of 32 Iowa 257 (Phillips v. Oystee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The defendant introduced evidence to prove the character and materials of which his fence is constructed, and then offered to prove by each of the township trustees (the fence viewers) who had, at the request of defendant, officially examined the fence, that “ it was of equal strength and security to the inclosure of the defendant in question, as a fence constructed of strong materials, put up in a good and substantial manner, with sufficiently small spaces [259]*259between tbe materials composing said fence, and raised to tbe beigbt of four feet and six inches.” Upon objection of plaintiff tbe court refused to permit tbe introduction of tbe evidence.
Tbe court instructed tbe jury to the effect that a fence to be lawful must be of the height of four feet and six inches. Tbe questions arising upop these rulings of tbe court will only be considered.
I. Section 1544 of the Revision is in these words: “ Any fence, constructed of strong materials, put up in a good and substantial manner, with sufficiently small spaces between tbe materials composing said fence, and raised to tbe beigbt of four feet six inches, shall be considered a lawful fence, or such other construction or fence as may, in tbe opinion of tbe fence viewers, be of equal strength and security to tbe inclosure, shall in like manner be considered lawful.”
Tbe first clause of this section prescribes what shall be a lawful fence by tbe use of general directions rather than specific terms as to tbe material and manner of construction. Tbe beigbt of tbe fence is particularly mentioned. Tbe last clause provides that a fence, or construction of equal strength and security, shall be considered lawful. It is plain that tbe legislature intended tbe fence first described to be a standard of strength and security; that any other structure that would equal it in these qualities should be lawful. The requirements in tbe standard need not necessarily be found in tbe structure compared with it. If all tbe qualities of tbe fence are equal as to strength and security to tbe standard, it is lawful. This is equally applicable to beigbt as to other matters. Tbe statute does not provide that a structure, equal in strength and security, must be of tbe beigbt of tbe standard. We conclude, therefore, that any structure, whatever may be its beigbt, if it be of equal strength and security with the standard, is a lawful fence. Tbe spirit and tbe object of the law fur[260]*260nishes an unanswerable argument in support of this construction. The design of the law is to provide security to the inclosed fields of landowners. If a structure three feet high will furnish the security required by law, why require it to be built higher ? If a fence of a peculiar construction affords the -security contemplated by law, whatever may be its height, it must be concluded a lawful fence.
The view of the law, taken by the circuit court in the instructions, is therefore erroneous.
The evidence offered, in our opinion, was erroneously excluded. ' The judgment of the circuit court is
Reversed.
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32 Iowa 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-oystee-iowa-1871.