Connecticut Statutes
§ 22-364 — Dogs or livestock roaming at large. Order for enforcement. Intentional or reckless subsequent violation.
Connecticut § 22-364
JurisdictionConnecticut
Title 22Agriculture. Domestic Animals
Ch. 435Dogs and Other Companion Animals. Kennels and Pet Shops
This text of Connecticut § 22-364 (Dogs or livestock roaming at large. Order for enforcement. Intentional or reckless subsequent violation.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 22-364 (2026).
Text
(a)No owner or keeper of any dog or livestock as defined in section 22-381 shall allow such dog or livestock to roam at large upon the land of another and not under control of the owner or keeper or the agent of the owner or keeper, nor allow such dog or livestock to roam at large on any portion of any public highway and not attended or under control of such owner or keeper or an agent of such owner or keeper, provided nothing in this subsection shall be construed to limit or prohibit the use of hunting dogs during the open hunting or training season. The unauthorized presence of any dog or livestock on the land of any person other than the owner or keeper of such dog or livestock or on any portion of a public highway when such dog or livestock is not attended by or under the control of s
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Related
Hammond v. Long
(D. Connecticut, 2025)
Legislative History
(1949 Rev., S. 3412; 1953, S. 1850d; 1963, P.A. 613, S. 32; P.A. 76-381, S. 11; P.A. 77-63, S. 2; P.A. 96-243, S. 11, 16; P.A. 23-184, S. 12; P.A. 24-105, S. 2.) History: 1963 act specified what constitutes prima facie evidence of violation and distinguished between penalties for first and subsequent offenses, imposing twenty-five-dollar minimum and one-hundred-dollar maximum fine for subsequent offenses, and making imprisonment an optional penalty only for subsequent offenses where previously applicable to first offenses as well; P.A. 76-381 made violation an infraction, deleting previous penalty provisions; P.A. 77-63 prohibited dogs from roaming on any portion of highway, deleting language which had limited applicability of prohibition to those portions of highway “not adjacent to the premises of the owner or keeper”; P.A. 96-243 added Subsec. (b) re subsequent intentional or reckless violations, effective June 6, 1996; P.A. 23-184 amended Subsec. (a) to add references to livestock and made technical changes, effective June 28, 2023; P.A. 24-105 amended Subsec. (a) to authorize animal control officers to seek an order for enforcement, effective June 4, 2024. Cited. 9 CA 686. Cited. 33 CS 660. Subsec. (a): The fact that an owner allows a dog to roam does not exonerate a keeper who also allows the dog to roam; either an owner or a keeper or both can be held liable for a violation of statute regardless of whether the owner was present and known to authorities at the time of the incident. 120 CA 324. Defendant who allowed dog to wander out of sight 20 to 30 yards away while on property of another violated Subsec., which is not unconstitutionally void for vagueness as applied, and which gives fair notice that Subsec. prohibits a dog owner from, inter alia, allowing a dog freely to move around another's property, unrestrained and unhindered, and not under the direct influence of owner; dog's subsequent response to owner's verbal command did not demonstrate “control” required by Subsec. 139 CA 107.
Nearby Sections
15
§ 22-10
Reports of moneys expended.§ 22-101
Penalty. Appeal.§ 22-111aa
Definitions.§ 22-111b
Definitions.§ 22-111bb
Registration.§ 22-111cc
Labeling.§ 22-111d
Labeling.Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
Connecticut § 22-364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ct/22-364.