Webb v. Wessell
This text of 178 S.W. 696 (Webb v. Wessell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The appellee sued the appellant, N. B. Webb, and W. F. Palmex-, in the justice court, for damages for killing his dog. He recovered a judgment for $90. An appeal was prosecuted by Webb and Palmer to the district court, where a judgment was rendered against them in favor of the appel-lee for $100. The case was tried before the court without a jury.
The evidence shows that the dog for which the recovery was sought was a valuable, well-trained pointer dog, and was killed under the following circumstances: Webb was the owner or manager of a farm situated near the city of Jefferson, on which he kept a herd of goats. He had employed Palmer to work upon the farm and to watch over the goats and see that they were not molested by dogs. On Sunday, May 17, 1914, Palmer shot and killed the appellee’s dog while it was inside the inclosure containing the goats. There was testimony tending to show that, at the time the shooting occurred, the dog was not molesting or attempting to molest the goats. Palmer admitted the killing, but sought to justify it upon the ground that the dog was killed in defense of the goats. He testified, in substance, that prior to the day the dog was killed three of the goats had been missed, and he suspected that they had been killed by dogs, but did not know. On the afternoon of the day of the killing the dog in controversy, in company with another dog, had attacked one of the goats, and they were discovered in the act of devouring it. Palmer drove them off. He then went to Webb’s barn and procured a gun, and on his return, finding this dog still in the inclosure not a great way from the herd of goats, shot and killed him. While gone to the barn after the gun, Palmer left his wife to stand guard over the goats and prevent further depredations by the dogs. He insists that he did the killing purely in defense of the flock of goats, and that this was necessary. According to Palmer’s testimony, when he went after the gun he reported the situation to Webb and was instructed by the latter, if the dogs were found on the goats, to kill them. Palmer further testified that he tried to drive the dogs from the pasture; that they refused to leave the premises, and ran off down in the field. According to the evidence, the dog had a money value equal to the amount of the recovery. No question is made in this appeal as to the judgment being excessive.
Webb alone has prosecuted an appeal. He urges two grounds for reversing the judgment: (1) That, under the facts, Palmer had a legal right to kill the dog; and (2) that the act of Palmer in killing the dog, if unlawful, was one for which Palmer alone was responsible.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
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178 S.W. 696, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-wessell-texapp-1915.