21 Mo. App. 490 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion óf the court.
The plaintiff, Martha J. Brauer (with whom her husband is joined as a co-plaintiff), sued before a justice of the peace for the wrongful and malicious killing of her dog, claiming damages in the sum of fifty. dollars. On an appeal to the circuit court, a jury gave her a verdict lor the amount claimed.
' The court instructed the jury: “ Even though you may believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s dog killed, or maimed one or more of defendants sheep defendant had no legal right to kill him, unless you shall find from the-evidence that defendant, before shooting the dog, notified plaintiff in writing of the fact that he had killed or maimed such sheep, etc.” The instruction makes no exception in favor of a killing done while the dog was rathe very act of destroying the defendant’s property. It appears to have been given from a totally mistaken-view of section seven of “An act to discourage the-keeping of useless and sheep-killing dogs, and to provide indemnity for damages done by same,” approved March 19,1881. (Sess. Acts’81, p. 127). This reads as follows: “In every case where sheep are killed or injured by any dog or dogs the owner, keeper, or harborer of- such dog- or dogs shall forthwith kill the same, and for each day he shall refuse or neglect to do so, after receiving notice in -writing, he shall forfeit to the county the sum of one dollar, to be paid into the county treasury to become a part of the permanent school fund of the county, and it shall be lawful for any person to kill such dog or dogs.”
Not a word in this statute indicates a purpose to-abridge or limit the common law right of every sheep-owner to protect his property while in actual peril, from
We think that the court erred in the exclusion of testimony offered by the defendant, and that the instruction as given, was calculated to mislead the jury.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded,