86 Md. 293 | Md. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees filed a bill against the appellants to restrain and enjoin them “ from doing or performing any act or acts contemplated to be by them done or performed ” by an ordinance entitled ‘ ‘ An ordinance regulating the running at large, catching, impounding and killing dogs within the corporate limits of Hagerstown.” The object of the proceeding is to test the validity of the ordinance, and, therefore, we need not stop to discuss any technical objections that might be urged to the form of the bill or other pleadings, especially as the only point suggested has been remedied by an agreement filed in this Court to correct an omission from the record.
The ordinance, after enacting that dogs shall not be permitted to run at large within the corporate limits of Hagerstown, provides for the appointment of not more than three persons to “ seize and kill, subject to the subsequent provisions of this ordinance, all dogs running at large within the corporate limits of the city of Hagerstown. All dogs so seized by them shall be detained in a suitable place to be provided by him or them for a period of twenty-four houi's. They shall notify evexy owner of any dog who has a collar upon his dog’s neck with the owner’s name engraven
The charter of Hagerstown contains no express provision prohibiting dogs from running at large. The only reference made to them is a power “ to levy a tax and impose a license on dogs.” It does, however, vest the Mayor and Council with power “ to pass all ordinances necessary for the good government of the town ; to prevent, remove and abate all nuisances or obstructions in or upon the streets,” etc. And after enumerating the above and other powers, section 121 of Art. 22 of the Local Code, which includes this charter, provides that “ for the purpose of carrying out the foregoing powers, and for the preservation of the cleanliness, health, peace and good order of the community, and for the protection of the lives and property of the citizens, and to suppress, abate or discontinue, or cause to be suppressed, abated or discontinued, all nuisances within the corporate and sanitary limits of said town—they may pass all ordinances or by-laws from time to time necessary. ” To insure the observance of such ordinance it authorizes the imposition of fines and imprisonment in default of the payment of fines imposed.
If dogs, by running at large, had become nuisances or offended any of the other provisions of the charter quoted above, it would seem clear that the Mayor and Council could adopt reasonable measures to abate the nuisance or remedy the evil, although there is no express provision in
It was said by the learned Judge who decided the case below that “I am not to be understood as deciding that the municipal authorities have not the power to provide for the impounding of all dogs or other animals running at large upon the streets ; for the killing of such as have no owners, and for the removal and suppression of those having owners from the streets and highways of the town,” but he was of the opinion that the órdinance was void because it did not provide for notice to the owners of the dogs taken under its provisions. It seems to us that when it is determined, as we do, that the power was vested in the Mayor and Council to prevent dogs from running at large and to enforce it by impounding them, the case is practically determined in favor of the city.
It is true that dogs are now generally recognized as property. At common law civil actions could always be maintained for their recovery, although they were not regarded as the subjects of larceny. But they are of a qualified kind of property and such as is peculiarly the subject of police regulations. They have never ranked with such domestic animals as horses, cattle and sheep, in which the owner has an unqualified and complete property. Various reasons have been assigned for the distinction, among which are that dogs are not used for food, husbandry, or as beasts of bur
The ordinance before us requires notice of seizure to be given to the owner of any dog upon which there is a collar, with the owner’s name engraven thereon, so it can be ransomed by the payment of the sum of one dollar. The same protection against the destruction of dogs is thus given owners as is done in cases above cited, where collars were required to be worn as evidence of the payment of the license fees. Section 3 provides that any owner' of any dog seized may redeem the same upon the payment to the person so seizing and impounding said dog the sum of one dollar. A reasonable construction of that section would require that when the owner is known he at least be notified
Decree reversed and bill dismissed with costs to the appellants.