93 Ala. 427 | Ala. | 1890
— Appellant had a vacant lot on the corner of Church and Sycamore streets in the town of Decatur. There were no fences on the side of the lot nest to the two streets. To keep persons from passing across the lot, the appellant had a barbed wire stretched along its side next to one of the streets, a distance of one hundred and thirty-two feet. The wire was supported by five posts thirty or forty feet apart, and was about four feet from the ground at the posts. It was stretched by hand only, and sagged between the posts from eight to twelve inches. There was nothing but the posts and
In considering the question oí the appellant’s liability on the facts of this case, regard is to be had to the state of our law as to the right of owners of domestic animals to suffer them to run at large. In view of the statutes and of the former decisions of this court, no discussion of this subject is called for in the present case. It is well settled that, when such animals go upon lands not inclosed by a lawful fence as defined by the statute, the owner thereof can not be regarded as a trespasser; that the owner of cattle and stock has the right to permit them to run at large; and'that, in exercising this right, he can not be treated as guilty of contributory negligence in reference to any injury they may suffer in consequence of the fault of the proprietor of the uninclosed premises upon which they may stray or intrude. — Code of 1886, §§ 1364, 1365; Ala. Gt. Southern R. R. Co. v. Jones, 71 Ala. 487; Pruitt v. Ellington, 59 Ala. 454; Lee County v. Yarbrough, 85 Ala. 590; Rowe v. Baber, decided during the present term. The common-law rule, that the owner of domestic animals must keep them in his own inclosure, and can not, without becoming a trespasser, suffer them to run at large on the uninclosed lands of others, is completely reversed in this State; so that (he general rule here is to fence stock out, not in, the law specially protecting the right of the owner" thereof to suffer them to run at large.
Where no right to suffer domestic animals to run at large is recognized, it legitimately follows that the owner thereof, being chargeable with knowledge of the natural propensity of such animals. to stray upon any lands to which access is not cut off, in failing to keep them confined, should be treated as assuming the risks to which they may be exposed in their wanderings, and should be answerable for such damages as may naturally be expected to result from the intrusion of such animals upon the premises of others. Where, on the other hand, the right to suffer such animals to run at large is recognized, it would seem as legitimately to follow that the owner of land, not properly inclosed, is without remedy for injury
The evidence in this case fully sustained the finding of the-City Court as to the defendant’s negligence. A single barbed wire, four feet from the ground, and loosely hung from posts thirty or forty feet apart, was certainly not calculated to attract the notice of animals so as to prevent them from trying to pass to or from the lot, which was otherwise uninclosed. It could not be pretended that such an erection was a barbed wire fence, constructed and maintained as ordinarily prudent husbandmen usually construct fences. There was no proof of any local law, or municipal regulation, abridging the right of the owner of domestic animals to suffer them to run at large. The defendant being chargeable with knowledge of this right in others, and also with knowledge of the habits of such animals to stray and browse upon uninclosed land, is to be regarded as guilty of negligence in permitting the wire to •remain in such a condition as to be an obvious peril to animals straying upon the lot. And the injury complained of having resulted from such negligence, the defendant was liable therefor.
The conclusion of fact stated in defendant’s second plea, to the effect that contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff was deducible from his acts in allowing his mule to run at large and to trespass upon defendant’s property, was not supported by the evidence; because, in the circumstances developed by the proof, those acts did not constitute negligence, as they might have done under the influence of a local law, or municipal regulation, rendering inapplicable the general law of the State on the subject. No error is discovered in the rulings of the City Court.
Affirmed.