102 Ky. 499 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
The parties to this action own adjoining and enclosed lands. By a verbal agreement a partition fence was built by them. Grow constructed his part of pickets and Clem-mons constructed his part of rails, what is commonly called a worm fence. Clemmons’ fence appears to have been built upon his own land. On August 31, 1894, he gave Grow a notice in writing that he would proceed, after the 1st of the following December, to remove his part of the partition fence. On December 1st Clemmons removed the panel of his fence which united it to the part of the partition fence which Grow had built. On the same day he erected fence posts on his own land the entire distance of the partition fence. In doing so he put the posts in the corners of the worm fence so far as it extended, and from that point he planted posts on his own land, but near the picket fence. Part of the distance lid placed three strands of wire and the balance only two. The kind of partition fence which existed between the lands of the parties is described in section 1783, Kentucky Statutes (section 4, act approved April 20, 1893). That section relates io partition fences which exist by agreement or acquiescence. Section 1784, Kentucky Statutes, provides for the erection of partition fences under certain conditions. Section 1785, Kentucky Statutes, provides the method of repairing partition fences. The first clause in section 1786, Kentucky Statutes, provides the conditions under which one can not be compelled to contribute to the
The first clause of section 1786 would more appropriately appear in section 1784. The last clause in section 1786 is as follows: “Neither party shall remove same without the consent of the other, except between the 1st of December and the 1st of March of the ensuing year.”
Section 1787 is as follows: “No such change as named in the last section shall be made unless three months’ previous notice in writing shall be given to the opposite party by the person desiring to make the same.”
While the court does not quite understand why the legislature would attempt to make one, under certain conditions, contribute to the erection of a partition fence, but, at the same time, allow him to immediately give notice and remove it. But it can not be said that that clause of section 1786 which authorizes a party to remove his part of the partition fence between certain dates upon notice relates particularly to any one of the partition fences referred to or described in the various sections of the statute. While this clause might more appropriately have been part of section 1787, still the! language is comprehensive enough to embrace any ope of the partition fences to which we have referred.
It can not be said that it refers alone to the partition fence, for which in part the owner of unenclosed lands is required to pay when he desires to enclose them by uniting his outside boundary fence to the fence of another, by the doing of which his unenclosed lands will thereby become
We, therefore, conclude that Clemmons had the right to remove his fence between the 1st of December and the 1st of March following the service of the notice. The manifest? purpose of the statute was to prevent one who had built part of a partition fence, or who had an interest otherwise in a partition fence, from removing it without notice, and thus expose the crops of his neighbor, or to expose the premises of his neighbor to the ravages of stock or deprive him of the use of it for a time. The time which was prescribed for the removal is such when it is supposed that the farmer will not have growing crops, and at the same time allow him to erect a fence upon his own lands for the purpose of enclosing his premises. Therefore, the legislature has wisely! selected the season during which the removal must take place.
It is insisted by counsel for appellee that the removal of the panel of the fence, as we have described, did not constitute a removal in contemplation of the statute. The worm fence was entirely on the land of Clemmons. Grow had notice that he could no longer enjoy the use of that fence as a partition fence; that if he desired to continue to have his lands enclosed be could not look to Clemmons to aid him, and share the burden and expense of the partition fence, but that he would be required to build one himself along the line where Grow’s part of the fence had existed. A.s the rails were upon Clemmon’s land, he had the right tc# permit them to remain at that place or to take them else
It seems to us that that did not re-invest it with the character of a partition fence. We think there was a removal or a change so that it could not longer be treated or regarded as a partition fence. While it remained a partition fence Clemmons had no right to use barbed-wire in repairing it, neither could he use it in the construction of a new one without the consent of Grow.
The legislature has not attempted to prevent the owner of land from erecting fences of barbed-wire except partition fences. If Clemmons had the right to build a fence along his line, then he had the right to build it of rails and harbed-wire, or either. If Grow desired to continue to have his land enclosed, he had the right to build whatever kind of fence he desired. If he did not desire to do this, but wanted) to allow his land to be enclosed in part by a fence which Clemmons had erected, it did not give him the right to dictate to Clemmons what character of fence he should build. It is true that Clemmons removed the fence one day earlier than he was authorized under the law. He did it on the 1st day of December; the law did not require him on the day following to do an idle thing to put up the panel of fence which he • had removed and immediately tear it down in order to say there had been a removal of the fence. The
' The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion