Defendants appeal from a superior court decision holding them liable to plaintiffs for a share of the cost of a division fence erected by plaintiffs between the parties’ properties pursuant to 24 V.S.A. chapter 109 (fence law). We reverse.
I.
In 1970, defendants bought fifty acres of wooded and unoccupied land in Newport and cleared two acres, upon which they built their home. Four years later, plaintiffs bought a 310-acre parcel of land adjoining defendants’ property and began pasturing a herd of cattle next to an existing division fence. Despite the fence, which was apparently in a state of disrepair, plaintiffs’ livestock repeatedly escaped onto defendants’ land.
*47 With defendants’ permission, plaintiffs constructed an electric fence on defendants’ property in order to prevent the animals from trespassing. When that fence was destroyed, plaintiffs asked defendants to help them reconstruct the division fence and pay a proportionate share thereof. Defendants, who owned no livestock or domestic animals, refused. Plaintiffs then asked the local fence viewers to make a division of the fence pursuant to 24 V.S.A. § 3810, which they did. Once the viewers’ decision was duly recorded in the town clerk’s office, plaintiffs again asked defendants to build their share of the fence. Upon defendants’ refusal to do so, plaintiffs built the 850 feet of fence that the viewers had assigned to defendants, and brought suit to collect the sum expended, as authorized by 24 V.S.A. §§ 3808 and 3816.
The case went to trial in early 1982, with judgment for plaintiffs. Following an appeal to this Court, the matter was remanded so that defendants could pursue the administrative remedy provided under 24 V.S.A. § 3802, which authorizes the selectmen to exempt owners of “unimproved and unoccupied land” from the fencing requirements of chapter 109.
1
Choquette v. Perrault,
*48 II.
At common law, landowners were under no affirmative duty to fence their lands unless such a duty was established by prescription or by an agreement between the interested parties. See 5 R. Powell, The Law of Real Property § 693 (1989). Rather, the common law encouraged landowners to fence their properties by creating strict liability for damages caused by trespassing animals. See, e.g., W. Keeton, Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 76 (5th ed. 1984). Ultimately, Vermont, like many other states, enacted laws to incorporate a duty to fence into the statutes. The first version of our fence law was adopted in 1780. The modern version of this law, which is very similar to the original act, is now codified in chapter 109 of Title 24.
Under the present statutory scheme, owners or occupants of adjoining lands, where the adjoining lands are actually occupied, are responsible for making and maintaining “equal portions” of the division fence between their lands. 24 V.S.A. § 3802. The owner of land which is both “unimproved and unoccupied” is likewise responsible for his portion of the division fence, unless the local selectmen on application by either party decide that he “ought not to be compelled” to contribute to it. Id. In that event, the owner of the adjacent occupied land “may make the whole or such part” of the fence “as is necessary to protect himself,” and if the other land ever becomes occupied “so as to be benefited by such fence,” that land’s owner must reimburse his neighbor for his portion of the fence. Id. § 3803. The statutory scheme further provides that where adjoining properties do not have a division fence, neither party may pasture animals until they agree to do so without a fence, and if they fail to agree, then the fence viewers shall decide the number of animals each party may put upon the land. Id. § 3804.
Where the lands of two or more individuals are not required to be fenced, each of them is liable for damages caused by his animals to others’ occupied lands.
Id.
§ 3807. This principle is in accord with common law principles of liability for straying animals. W. Keeton,
swpra,
§ 76. If a person fails to maintain his portion of a division fence, however, he will be liable for damages “done to or suffered by” his neighbor “in consequence of
*49
such neglect.” 24 V.S.A. § 3808. This departure from the common law’s strict liability for one’s own animals has been construed as meaning that if A’s livestock stray onto B’s property due to B’s failure to maintain his portion of the division fence, B cannot recover for any damages. See, e.g.,
Scott v. Grover,
III.
Plaintiffs and amicus State of Vermont both contend that Vermont’s fence law is a justifiable application of the state’s police power, which has been defined as “the governmental power of conserving and safeguarding the public safety, health, and welfare.”
State v. Quattropani,
(1) Freedom from unwanted intrusion by a neighbor’s cattle.
(2) FYeedom from trespassing neighbors and an increase in privacy.
(3) Elimination of “devil’s lanes,” unoccupied spaces between separate fences constructed by hostile neighbors.
(4) Diminution of lawsuits arising out of damage caused by straying cows.
(5) Discouragement of litigation by clearly marking the boundaries of rural lands.
(6) Increase in value of all land by fostering the continued vitality of agriculture.
In reaching its decision, the trial court rejected the relatively recent case of
Sweeney v. Murphy,
In holding the New York fence law unconstitutional, the court stated that despite the presumption of the statute’s validity,
“[A] statute whose effect is to curtail the liberty of individuals to live their lives as they would and whose justification is claimed to lie in the exercise of the police power of the State must bear a reasonable relationship to, some proportion to, the alleged public good on account of which this restriction on individual liberty would be justified.”
Id.
at 308,
. While defendants herein argue for the applicability of the New York court’s analysis in
Sweeney v. Murphy,
plaintiffs and amicus point to the case of
Glass v. Dryden,
We find
Glass
to be inapposite.
Glass
did not entail a constitutional challenge to the entire scheme of Ohio’s fence law. See
id.
at 150,
IV.
Our first task is to ascertain the proper standard against which to measure the challenged law’s constitutionality under the Vermont Constitution. Absent the involvement of a fundamental right or a suspect class, a legislative enactment is presumed to be constitutional, see
Smith v. Town of St. Johnsbury,
In Vermont Woolen, a property owner challenged the classification of a certain watercourse, claiming that the classification statute offended Chapter I, Article 7 of the Vermont Constitution, which declares:
That government is, or ought to be, instituted for the common benefit, protection, and security of the people, nation, or community, and not for the particular emolument or *52 advantage of any single man, family, or set of men, who are a part only of that community ....
This Court upheld the classification, pointing out that although the statute could result in burdensome costs to certain property owners, it was reasonably related to a public purpose — the abatement of water pollution — and therefore neither exceeded the state’s police power nor violated Article 7.
Vermont Woolen,
More recently, in
State v. Ludlow Supermarkets, Inc.,
The test, then, in determining a law’s constitutionality under Article 7 when no fundamental right or suspect class is involved, is whether the law is reasonably related to the promotion of a valid public purpose. Employing this standard of review, we hold that 24 V.S.A. § 3802 is unconstitutional as applied to persons who own no livestock.
Notwithstanding the trial court’s effort to identify potential benefits accruing to the public and to adjoining landowners without livestock, the simple truth is that the fence law was *53 enacted primarily to benefit landowners with livestock. One need only look at the plain language of the provisions of the law to verify this fact:
Fences four and one-half feet high, in good repair and so constructed as to prevent the escape of sheep . . . shall be deemed sufficient_A person driving cattle, sheep, swine or other stock upon a highway, and exercising reasonable care, shall not be liable for damages by reason of the escape of such animals into an enclosure . . . unless the [enclosure’s] fence ... is a sufficient fence ....
24 V.S.A. § 3801. The argument that a landowner without livestock benefits to the extent that he or she is protected by straying livestock is delusive, considering the fact that, absent the statute, the liability for trespassing livestock lies solely with the owner of the livestock.
2
See W. Keeton,
supra,
§ 76; see also
Alma Coal Co. v. Cozad,
In the context of the land-use patterns of the nineteenth century, Vermont’s fence law served the broad public interest. Though not all Vermonters were engaged in agricultural pursuits, the land was predominantly open and farmed, and most rural landowners were also livestock owners. 3 This is not the case today. Much of the open farmland that existed at the turn of the century has reverted to woodlands 4 or otherwise been developed. We can no longer assume that the fénce law affects *54 livestock owners almost exclusively. As a result of changing land-use patterns, the law more and more often applies to landowners without livestock. In such situations, the fence law is burdensome, arbitrary and confiscatory, and therefore cannot pass constitutional muster.
We intend neither to disparage the rural industries in Vermont nor to handcuff state government when it desires to aid vital, economic interests of the state. The state may tax or regulate the general populace to benefit key sectors of the economy. Indeed,, virtually all regulatory statutes have disparate effects on various sectors of the public.
State v. Ludlow Supermarkets, Inc.,
We agree with the rationale stated in
Sweeney
that “requiring an adjoining owner... who does not keep livestock, to share the cost of [a] fence for the benefit of [a] neighbor is not reasonably necessary to any legitimate public purpose and is oppressive.”
As we recognized in
State v. Auclair,
Reversed with directions to enter judgment in favor of defendants.
Notes
24 V.S.A. § 3802 provides that “[t]he owner of unimproved and unoccupied land adjoining occupied land of another person shall make his proportion of a fence between such lands unless the selectmen ... decide that such owner ought not to be compelled to make any part of such fence. The decision of the selectmen . . . shall be final between the parties.” Defendants had decided not to pursue that remedy, believing it to be a futile gesture.
We also note that alleviation of the problem of “devil’s lanes” directly benefits landowners with livestock. The principal problem with “devil’s lanes” is that livestock become trapped between two fences built in dose proximity. See
Alma Coal Co. v. Cozad,
See H. Wilson, The Hill Country of Northern New England: Its Social and Economic History 1790-1930, at 346-80 (1936).
Between 1900 and 1930 one-fourth of the farms in Vermont were given up and the amount of improved land decreased by 34%. See H. Wilson, swpra, at 346-47. Between 1950 and 1982 land area in farms further decreased by 34%. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 1982 Census of Agriculture: Vermont, vol. 1 Geographic Area Series, part 45.
