56 Vt. 499 | Vt. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff and defendants in the season of 1881 owned and occupied adjoining farms. Their pastures were separated by a division lino fence. The statute places the burden and duty of erecting and maintaining such division fence, upon such owners and occupiers jointly and equally. R. L. s. 3179. It points out a method by which they may make a permanent division of such fence, so as not only to bind them, but also their successors.. R..L. ss. 3187, 3190. They may also, by an agreement, which will not bind their successors, because not made and recorded as
Thp referees have found that the plaintiff’s portion of the •division fence, as made by the parties, was on the occasion of tiie injury complained of, insufficient and out of repair; and that the defendant’s bull passed from his pasture into the plaintiff’s pasture through the gap in the fence occasioned by this insufficiency, if the facts stated by them had a tendency to sup■port such finding.' We think the facts reported had a tendency to establish this finding. The bull was put into the defendant’s pasture. The next morning he was found in the plaintiffs’ pasture. The natural and almost inevitable conclusion is that he. passed over some portion of the division fence. At one place the defendant’s portion of the division fence was defective, but there were no indications that he had passed at that place. At the place where the plaintiff’s portion of the division fence was all gone, there were cattle tracks. The bull had been in the plaintiff’s pasture on two occasions before, that season. There are no facts reported, tending to show that any other cattle had passed the division fence. The tracks at this’ point, together with the insufficiency in the fence, tend strongly, in the absence • of all evidence that any other animals had passed the division fence from one pasture to the other, to show that the bull • crossed the division fence, on the occasion complained of, at that point. Hence, it follows, that the defendant’s bull was in the plaintiff’s pasture, on the occasion of the injury to the plaintiff’s horse, through the plaintiff’s fault, — through his neglect to discharge his duty towards the defendants in regard to the division fence. Therefore the bull was not there wrongfully. He was there ratlicr by the invitation or permission of the plaintiff. The
The plaintiff contends that the defendants should be held liable in this case, though they did not know of the vicious propensity of the bull, bccause'it is found that he was more than one year old. He says by s. 4003 E. L., it is the duty of the owner of such an animal to restrain him; and that by reason of • this section of the statute the bull was wrongfully in the defendants’ pasture even, and so wrongfully in the plaintiff’s pasture. That section provides that if the owner or keeper of such" an animal shall wilfully or negligently permit him to run at large out of the enclosure of such owner or keeper, he shall forfeit, &c. When turned into the defendants’ pasture the bull was in their enclosure. He was not at large. On the facts reported this section of the statute has no application to the case, and can have no influence upon the decision. However wise it might be for the legislature to enact that a bull more than one year old should
The judgment is reversed, and judgment rendered, on the report, for the defendants to recover their costs.