Poindexter v. May

47 L.R.A. 588, 34 S.E. 971, 98 Va. 143, 1900 Va. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 L.R.A. 588 (Poindexter v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poindexter v. May, 47 L.R.A. 588, 34 S.E. 971, 98 Va. 143, 1900 Va. LEXIS 19 (Va. 1900).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this case alleges that appellee is the owner of a tract of land in Louisa county with young fruit trees, grass, and herbage growing thereon; that said land is enclosed by a fence, but not such a fence as is defined by the Code of Virginia to be a lawful fence; that appellant is in the possession and management of adjacent land, with cattle and horses thereon, and has been in the habit of turning said cattle and' horses upon the lands of appellee, and still continues thus to trespass upon him, thereby injuring his fruit trees and destroying his grass and herbage; that inasmuch as appellee’s fence is not such as the law prescribes as a lawful fence, appellant claims the right to turn his stock upon appellee’s land, and says he will continue to do so until prohibited by some competent authority. The bill further alleges that appellant is utterly insolvent, and that unless restrained irreparable injury and mischief will result to appellee from such trespass. The prayer of the bill is that appellant may be restrained from further violation of appellee’s rights.

A temporary injunction was granted restraining and enjoining appellant from allowing, permitting or suffering his cattle and horses to trespass upon appellee’s premises, until the further order of the court. At the following term of the court, .appellant filed his demurrer and answer, in which he admits the statements contained in the bill to be true, and insists that inasmuch as appellee’s land is not enclosed bv a lawful fence as defined by the Code of Virginia, his cattle and horses have a right to run thereon, and that appellee is entitled to no remedy for the injury complained of.

[145]*145Upon a final hearing the Circuit Court of Louisa overruled the demurrer, and decreed that the injunction awarded, restraining and enjoining appellant from allowing, permitting or suffering his cattle and horses to trespass upon appellee’s premises, be modified so as to perpetually restrain appellant from turning his horses and cattle in and upon the lands of appellee.

The appellant assigns as error (1) the action of the court in overruling the demurrer; and (2) its action in granting the injunction restraining him from turning his cattle upon appellee’s, land.

Under Pule LX., the appellee assigns as error the action of the court in refusing to restrain appellant from allowing, permitting or suffering his cattle to stray upon appellee’s land.

The questions involved arise, alike, upon the demurrer and upon the hearing, and will be considered in the order best calculated to subserve convenience in statement.

The first contention of appellee is, “that there is no statute law in Virginia requiring the land-owner to maintain a lawful fence as defined by section 2038 of the Code, as a condition precedent to his right to recover damages for trespassing cattle, except as to the county of Accomac.”

The entire fence law of Virginia, at the time of the adoption of the present Oode (1887) was to be found in chapter 93 of that revision, from section 2038 to section 2061 inclusive. Section 2038 defined what should constitute a lawful fence. Since the adoption of the Oode several acts have been passed, which appellee claims have had the effect of repealing section 2038, and leaving no general statute in Virginia defining what shall be deemed a lawful fence. This section seems to have had singular treatment at the hands of the Legislature, hut when the several acts touching it are carefully examined we think it will clearly appear that although the section, eo nomine, 'has disappeared, still the law, in the same words, has survived the difficulties and dangers to which it has been subjected.'

[146]*146By act of 1889-’90 (page 945) section 2038 of the Oode was re-enacted and made to apply only to Orange county. This act was repealed by act of 1893-’4 (page 948), which last-named act concludes with these words, “and section 2038 of the Oode of 1887 is hereby re-enacted.” The Legislature, no doubt, seeing that this mode of re-enacting section 2038 was invalid, because in conflict with article 5, section 15, of the State Constitution, which provides that when a law is re-enacted it must be published at length, passed on the same day (Acts 1893-’4, page 941) an act in these words:

“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia, that every fence five feet high, which, if the fence be on a mound shall include the mound to the bottom of the ditch, shall be deemed a lawful fence as to any of the stock named in section two thousand and forty-two of the Code of Virginia, which could not creep through the same.”

The title to this act is as follows: “An act to define what shall he a lawful fence in Virginia.”

This act is in the words of section 2038 of the Oode, which had, as we have seen, been repealed, as a general law, by.the act of 1889-’90 (page 945). It, however, makes no reference to that section, and is therefore an independent general statute defining what shall be deemed a lawful fence in the State of Virginia.

By act of 1897-’8 (page 651) section 2038 of the Oode is again re-enacted, but is by the express terms of the title made to apply alone to the county of Accomac. Why this act should have been passed when the act of 1893-’4, in the same words, was on the statute book and applicable to Accomac county, it is difficult to understand. While, however, it adds nothing to the fence law of Accomac county, it in no way repeals, supersedes, or affects the general law found in the Acts of 1893-’4 (page 941).

This review of these several enactments brings us to the conclusion that the general fence law of Virginia is now to be found [147]*147in chapter 93 of the Code of 1887, except section 2038, and the amendment thereof, together with the act of 1893-’4 (page 941), which is in the words of section 2038.

It is further contended that these statutes do not repeal either expressly or by implication the common law rule which requires the owners of cattle to keep them upon their own lands on pain of becoming liable in trespass for their entry upon the lands of others, and that therefore the land-owner can, as at common law, maintain his action for trespass, in case the cattle of another stray upon his land, although he may not have a lawful fence such as the statute prescribes.

From the early history of Virginia as a colony to the present time, her laws touching the subject of “enclosures and certain trespass” have been, in effect, the same. The statute of 1631 (1 Hen. 17 6) provides that “every man shall enclose his ground with sufficient fences upon their own peril.” The act of 1632 (1 Hen. 199) reads: “ Every man shall enclose his ground with sufficient fences or else to plant upon their own peril.” The act of 1657 (1 Hen. 458) provides that if the-land-owner does not maintain a sufficient fence, whatsoever trespass or damage he shall sustain “shall be his own loss or detriment,” and provides, further, that he shall be liable for any damage to stock going upon his land, when his fence is not such as required by the statute, and that he shall be liable to double damage if the injury to such stock be wilful; and that if the land-owner shall maintain such a fence as the statute requires, that then the owner of any cattle shall be liable to make compensation for any damage or trespass committed by his cattle upon the land so enclosed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 L.R.A. 588, 34 S.E. 971, 98 Va. 143, 1900 Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poindexter-v-may-va-1900.