78 Ga. 50 | Ga. | 1887
This was an action of trespass guare elausam fregit, to which the defendant demurred generally. The demurrer was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted. The declaration avers that the defendant’s hogs, some twenty in number, were suffered to run at large, and that
It does not appear whether the stock law was of force in the county of the parties’ residence ; nor, in the view we take of this case, do we think it material whether it was or not. The provisions of the common law (Broom’s Commentaries, 781-2) regulating this matter, render the defendant answerable “for not only his own trespass, but that of his cattle also; for if, by his negligent keeping, they stray upon the land of another (and much more if he prompts or drives them on), and they there tread down his neighbor’s herbage, and spoil his corn or his trees, this is a trespass for which the owner must answer in damages; and the law gives the party injured a double remedy in this case, by permitting him to distrain the cattle thus damage feasant . . . till the owner shall make him satisfaction, or else by leaving him to the common remedy in foro contentioso by action, wherein, if any unwarrantable act of the defendant or his beasts in coming upon the land be proved, it is an act of trespass for which the plaintiff must recover some damages; such, however, as the jury shall think proper to assess.”
No alteration is made in this law by our statute, except that,by the former, the beasts of the trespasser are not permitted to stray on the land of another, whether enclosed
Judgment reversed.