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Page v. Olcott
13 N.H. 399
Superior Court of New Hampshir...
1843
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Woods, J.

In the reported opinion of the court in the ■case of Rust vs. Low, 6 Mass. R. 99, Mr. Ch. Jus. Parsons cites a case thus: “ The case of 36 H. 6 is not reported in-the. Year Books, but there is a short statement of it in Fitz. Abr. Bar. 168. It is thus: ‘ Note that it was adjudged by the court, if my beasts go into the close of another, which is adjoining to my close, for the defect of the close of the other, and further go into another close of the other, that I *401shall not be punished because I do not retake them and put them again into my close, until reparation be made of the other close, because they would go again.’ That I have given the true translation (says he) appears from Jenk., 4 Cent. Ca. 5. The rule, as there laid down, is, if A has green acre adjoining to his own close while acre, which adjoins to B’s close black acre, which A ought to fence against, if B’s cattle go from his black acre to A’s white acre, and thence to A’s green acre, this is no trespass, because A did not fence his white acre against B’s black acre.”

In the case cited, it was in effect decided to be through the default of A in neglecting to fence his close white acre adjoining black acre the close of B, that the cattle of B escaped from his close black acre, and committed the injury complained of, in A’s green acre ; while it was holden that B was faultless in putting his cattle into his close, and could not be made responsible for the consequences of the negligence of A.

The rule of law stated in the citation from the 4 Cent. Ca., and which would seem to be the same reported in Fitz. Abr. Bar. 168, would seem to be a just rule, and one resting upon sound reason. It would be wholly unreasonable to require one to keep his cattle upon his own land, or to hold him responsible for damage done by reason of their escaping into an adjoining close through defect of a fence which it was the duty of the owner of the adjoining close to keep in repair.

To hold such a doctrine would be to hold one person responsible for the wrong of another, and to give that other advantage from his own default, which would be in conflict with the clearest principles of law and reason.

Regarding the doctrine of the case cited from Fitz. Abr. and the Cent. Ca. as sound law, it is evidently applicable to the case under consideration, and decisive of it. That case clearly decides that the plaintiff can maintain no action under the circumstances of his case, and plainly indicates the rea*402son to be, that it was not the duty of the defendant to make such repairs as would have been necessary to prevent the first aggression, or a repetition of the trespass, and that the escape must be regarded as happening through no fault of the defendant.

The present case finds that the defendant’s land adjoined that of the plaintiff; that a division of the fence between the lands of the parties had been duly made and recorded ; that the sheep of the defendant escaped from his enclosure into the plaintiff’s pasture lands, through the insufficiency of that portion of the fence which the plaintiff was bound to repair, and thence into the locus in quo.

We cannot regard the defendant as at all in fault in the matter of the escape of the sheep, or of the injury and loss sustained by the plaintiff. The defendant placed his sheep in his own close, where he had an unquestionable right to place them, and against which the plaintiff, by law and in duty, was bound to keep a good and sufficient fence. That duty, however, was not performed, and by reason of its nonperformance the plaintiff suffered damage in her property. The consequences of the neglect cannot be visited upon the party no wise in fault. York vs. Davis, 11 N. H. Rep. 241.

And it cannot alter the case, as was contended by the counsel for the plaintiff, that the locus in quo was surrounded by a good and sufficient fence, which the plaintiff was not bound to keep in repair, as against the defendant. In the case cited by Parsons, it must be understood that the close in which the damage was done, was separated from the first mentioned close by a fence; for, otherwise, there could have been but one close. It is true, that the character of the fence around the locus in quo in that case is not stated, nor can it be material, upon the principles of that decision. The sheep having escaped from the pasture of the defendant through the default of the plaintiff, as between the parties the damage resulting therefrom must be considered as resulting from the same default.' The defendant was deficient in *403no duty, and was in no default. The plaintiff’s negligence must be regarded as occasioning the damage sustained. It is a fair presumption, which the law will make, that if the plaintiff had performed her duty properly, in repairing her part of the division fence, the sheep would not have escaped from the pasture of the defendant, and the damage complained of would not have been sustained. And it is clear, that while, under the circumstances of the case, the plaintiff is in law to be regarded as having contributed to the result of which complaint is made, she can have no action for the damage sustained, against the defendant, who has not occasioned it either by positive wrongful acts or by any negligence whatsoever.

We a.re clearly of the opinion, therefore, that the ruling of the court below was correct, and that there must be

Judgment on the verdict.

Case Details

Case Name: Page v. Olcott
Court Name: Superior Court of New Hampshire
Date Published: Jul 15, 1843
Citation: 13 N.H. 399
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