81 So. 426 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1918
The result of our first effort in this case demonstrates the wisdom of following the beaten path in the administration of justice. On first consideration, taking from the record facts which seemed not to be controverted as our predicate, we assumed that the plaintiff was relying on an ordinance of the town of Brighton (which we judicially know is a town of 1,502 population, according to the last federal census) as establishing a stock law district, and, with this as a basis for our conclusion, we ruled that the case was not brought within the provisions of section 4251 of the Code, imposing liability on the owner of domestic animals "for all injuries and trespasses committed by such animals by breaking into the inclosure or grounds of another inclosed by a lawful fence, or within a stock law district, or running at large in a common inclosure within which more persons than one are cultivating land without the consent of all such persons," etc., holding that the terms "a stock law district" as there used was a district within which stock are prohibited by statute from running at large. This conclusion was reached for the reason, not then stated, that this rule of liability originated in an act of the General Assembly approved February 26, 1887, providing that — *46
"Whenever in the state of Alabama two or more districts in which stock of any kind are prohibited from running at large, lie adjacent to each other and any stock passes from one of said districts into another, said stock and the owner thereof shall be liable for damages, in every respect to be enforced in the same manner as if they lived within the district where the damage is committed." Acts 1886-87, p. 67.
This act was incorporated in section 2115 of the Code of 1896, which reads:
"If any stock trespass upon any lands inclosed as herein prescribed, or embraced in a district in which such stock is by law prohibited from running at large, the owner of such stock must pay the damages; and for each trespass after the first, double damages."
The statute was brought forward into the Code of 1907 as section 4251 in its present form.
With this statute in force, the Supreme Court, in Jones v. Hines,
While, for these reasons, we adhere to the view that a "stock law district," within the meaning of section 4251 of the Code of 1907, is a district in which stock are by law prohibited from running at large, we are convinced that the premise assumed in disposing of the case on our first consideration is wholly untenable. In fact, appellee, in responding to the application for rehearing, says:
"There was never any ordinance in evidence showing that the town of Brighton ever attempted to make it a stock law district."
The bill of exceptions recites:
"The plaintiff then introduced in evidence an ordinance of the town of Brighton, to which the defendant objected," etc.
But the ordinance is not set out in the bill of exceptions, nor does the bill of exceptions purport to set out all the evidence, and, under repeated rulings in this state, the refusal of charges requested by the defendant and the objection to the admission of the ordinance in evidence is not properly presented for review. Southern Railway Co. v. Kendal Co.,
However, we hold that the complaint was subject to the objection pointed out by the fourth and tenth grounds of demurrer, and the court erred in overruling the demurrers.
Under the common law prevailing in this state, the owner of domestic animals may suffer them, to run at large, and the owner of premises not properly inclosed is without remedy for injury caused to his premises or growing crops by such animals. Hurd v. Lacy,
Statutes which are in derogation of the common law are strictly construed. 4 Mayf. Dig. p. 850, § 21, and authorities there cited. And when doubt or ambiguity result from codifying a statute, the court will refer to the original enactment and give effect to its provisions as originally framed, notwithstanding a change in the phraseology, unless a clear intention is manifested to change its operation and effect. E. T., V. G. R. R. Co. v. Hughes,
Our laws, like the common law, operate territorially and not personally. Jones v. Hines, supra. And so long as the law recognizes and protects the right of the citizen to turn his domestic animals on the common, the exercise of this right can never be made the basis of personal liability unless it is attended with negligence or wrongdoing, and it is not within legislative competency to impose such liability for the doing of a lawful act in a lawful way and without negligence. Zeigler v. S. N. A. R. R. Co.,
It therefore follows that, before the act of the defendant in turning her cow on the common can be made the basis of personal liability, it must be shown that the *47 general rule of law protecting such right has been abrogated by statute or is not applicable to the territory wherein the act was done. To entitle one to recover damages under the provisions of section 4251 of the Code of 1907, it is incumbent that he show by appropriate averments and proof, either that his premises were inclosed by a lawful fence, or that it was within a district wherein stock were prohibited by law from running at large, and that the defendant turned his stock at large in such district or in an adjacent stock law district, or allowed his stock to run at large in a common inclosure within which more persons than one cultivated lands without the consent of all such persons.
The question of the right of a municipal corporation to provide for the impounding of domestic animals trespassing or going within a district wherein stock are prohibited by ordinance from running at large is not involved in this case, but see Jones v. Hines, supra.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.