Williams v. Rivenburg

145 A.D. 93, 129 N.Y.S. 473, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1742
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 A.D. 93 (Williams v. Rivenburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Rivenburg, 145 A.D. 93, 129 N.Y.S. 473, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1742 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

Spring, J.:

The action is in conversion to recover damages of the defendant by reason of the killing of fiye calves owned by the plaintiff, and involves the construction of section 106 of the Agricultural Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 1). The defendant is the agent of the State Commissioner of Agriculture, representing that official in the city of New York, and the acts complamed of were done by him in pursuance to the general instructions given tó him by the head of the department.

The complaint alleges two causes of action, and they will be considered in their order.

1. The plaintiff, a cattle shipper, purchased at Rome, N. Y., and shipped by rail to the Union Stockyards, New York city, [95]*95on the 2⅞ day of April, 1908, one calf, in company with other calves, all consigned to him. Upon then- arrival at the point of destination, on the twenty-ninth of April, the calves were placed in a pen in the sto'ckyards in which calves were kept for sale. On April twenty-ninth the defendant, in the performance of his duties as an agent of the Commissioner of Agriculture, examined the calves in the stockyards, and seized seven on the ground that they were each under four weeks of age, and they were subsequently taken to an abattoir and killed. There were other inspectors with the defendant at the time, and a State veterinary surgeon of wide experience also examined these calves at the stockyards, and again after they were killed, and he testified the plaintiff’s calf was under four weeks of age, and his testimony was corroborated by all the inspectors. The farmer who raised the calf testified that he was born March twenty-eighth, more than four weeks before he was seized by the defendant.

Section 106 of the Agricultural Law, so far.as pertinent to this alleged cause of action, in prohibiting the bringing into a city, town or village of a calf for the purpose of selling the same, provides: “Unless it is in a good healthy condition, and no person or persons shall bring any such calf or carcass of the same or any part thereof except the hide into any city, town or village for the purpose of selling, offering or exposing the same for sale, unless the calf is four weeks of age.” And, further, the act provides: “ Any person or persons duly authorized by the Commissioner of Agriculture may examine any calf or veal offered or exposed for sale or kept with any stock of goods apparently exposed for sale and if such calf is under four weeks of age, or the veal is from a calf killed under four weeks of age, or from a calf in an unhealthy condition when killed, he may seize the same and cause it to he destroyed and disposed of in such manner as to make it impossible to he thereafter used for food.” The defendant claims that he was authorized to take and kill the calf by the Commissioner of Agriculture, and his authority to represent that officer is not impugned.

In this case there was a question of fact as to the age of the calf, and as the plaintiff was nonsuited he is entitled on this [96]*96' appeal to the interpretation of the evidence most favorable to him. We must start, therefore, with the assumption that the éalf was over four weeks of -age at the time of its seizure by the defendant. The appearances indicated that it was less than four weeks old. It was undersized. One hip was marked with shears so that in the event it was appropriated by the State authorities it could be identified and traeed to the farmer of whom it was purchased. The flesh was flabby and immature, and if we were considering the weight of the evidence we might well be justified in concluding that the calf was under four weeks old in spite of the explicit testimony of the farmer who owned its dam at the time the calf was born.

The statute, however, fixes arbitrarily the minimum age at which a healthy calf may be sold or exposed for sale at four weeks. ' One calf only three weeks old may be well nourished and- fattened and of good size, while another of six weeks of age may be scantily fed, poorly nurtured, undersized and scrawny. The larger one may be seized in pursuance of the authority given by the statute in question, while the smaller one may be exempt from seizure. It is often necessary in promulgating laws for the benefit of the public health, or to con-, serve any other utilitarian purpose, tó establish inflexible standards-. Milk containing more than eighty-eight percentum of water or fluids comes within the arbitrary'definition of adulterated milk. Milk containing eighty-nine percentum of water may be more wholesome in a particular batch than that of another quantity one percentum below the standard. One batch is within the condemnation of the statute, the other not. The fixing of the inflexible standard is the- result of tests and examinations extensively made and is adopted as a fairly just rule for milk generally, although in individual cases the enforcement of the law may occasionally operate unjustly.

No compensation is provided for to the owner of the calf seized, and the seizure is an invasion of his property rights and can only be supported because the enactment is in the interest of public health and a justifiable police regulation. The exercise of the right must, therefore, be within the letter of the statute. There is no discretion permitted. The inflexible requirement is that the calf offered for sale must be four [97]*97weeks of age, and if under that limit it may he seized. There is no authority to determine the age from the appearance of the animal. The statute does not provide if it is actually or apparently under four weeks of age that it may be seized, hut the language is precise, explicit under four weeks of age/’ and the official who seizes a calf in pursuance of the authority of this statute must he certain that the calf comes within its condemnation. The examination made, the appearance of the calf and other circumstances may he competent in order to fortify the evidence of age, and if the weight of evidence was reviewable on this appeal it might not be difficult to decide that the preponderance was with the defendant on that subject.

I think the defendant was not within the compass of his authority in seizing this calf, provided it was over four weeks of age, as we must assume. The Legislature might have vested the authority to seize if the animal is actually or apparently under four weeks of age, and in that event the agent of the Commissioner of Agriculture acting in good faith might be exonerated of liability even though the calf exceeded the age limit. The power to prescribe when private property may he taken or destroyed without compensation because it is deleterious to public health is lodged with the Legislature and the courts cannot enlarge the scope of that authority. ■

There is no claim that the calf was unhealthy. It was immature and the flesh flabby and stringy, hut it was not diseased. The “good healthy condition” referred to in the statute is a condition apart from that of age and signifies disease or some defect rendering the meat deleterious to the health of persons eating it. The calf was not taken and the case was not defended on that ground, hut because the animal was under four weeks of age.

I think the nonsuit as to the first cause of action was error.

2. The second cause of action ■ grows out of the seizure of four calves by the defendant in the Union Stockyards and which were indisputably under four weeks of age. On the 30th of January, 1909, the plaintiff at Ldwville, Lewis county, con[98]

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Bluebook (online)
145 A.D. 93, 129 N.Y.S. 473, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-rivenburg-nyappdiv-1911.