49 Cal. 117 | Cal. | 1874
The defendant being in the actual possession of a tract of land in Butte county, which he was holding and cultivating under an alleged lease from the plaintiff, found certain of the plaintiff’s hogs trespassing on his grain-field and destroying certain sacks of grain in the field. He thereupon drove the hogs into his corral, and posted notices at three
In support of his appeal the defendant contends, first, that cattle damage feasant may be taken up under the rules of the common law, and held until the charges are paid; and it is claimed that this principle of the common law is in force here; second, that by the Act of March 26, 1857 (Statutes, 1857, p. 106), this rule of the common law was expressly re-enacted in respect to the County of Butte, and authorized the defendant to seize the hogs and hold them until the charges were paid. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that the common law rule is not in force here, and that the statute is unconstitutional, because it deprives the owner of his property without due process of law.
The first section of the statute provides that if hogs be found trespassing upon the premises of any persons in certain counties, including Butte, between the first days of March and September, “the owner or proprietor of such premises may take up and safely keep, at the expense of the owner or owners thereof, all such hogs so found trespassing.” The second section provides that “all persons taking up hogs trespassing upon their lands, whether enclosed or not, shall immediately post notices in three of the most public places in the township, containing a description of the ear and other marks of the hogs, whereby they may be identified.” The next section provides that if the owner, within five days after the notices are posted, shall come forward and prove
I discover no plausible ground on which the first three sections of the Act can be impugned as obnoxious to any constitutional objection. They merely .authorize hogs damage feasant, to be impounded by the owner of the premises until the damage they have committed and the cost of keeping them shall be paid. They only create a lien on the property for the damages and costs, with a right to the possession until the lien is satisfied. That it is competent for the Legislature to confer such a lien on cattle taken damage feasant, and to authorize their detention until the damages and expenses are paid, was decided in Cook v. Gregg (46 N. Y. 441), a case very similar to the present, and we adopt the reasoning in that case.
The first three sections are readily severable from the remainder, and may be upheld though the others should be pronounced void. And it will be observed that when the action was commenced the defendant had done nothing more than he was authorized to do by the first three sections. The property had not been sold or offered for sale; and the question whether the provision for ascertaining the amount of the damage and expenses, and for a sale of the property, violates the constitution, does not arise in the case.
The first three sections being valid, and severable from.
We are not to be understood as intimating an opinion as to the constitutionality of the remainder of the Act, that question not being before us.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Neither Mr. Chief Justice Wallace nor Mr. Justice Rhodes expressed an opinion.