38 Wis. 504 | Wis. | 1875
The controlling question to be determined on the appeal is, Can the defendant be held liable for the consequences of the vicious or mischievous act of his dog, unless he had previous knowledge of the vicious or mischievous propensities of the animal ? At the common law he would not be
“SECTION 8. The owner or keeper of any dog or dogs which shall have wounded, maimed or killed any cattle, horses, sheep or lambs, or injured any person, shall be liable to the owner or legal possessor of such cattle, horses, sheep or lambs, or to the person injured, in all damages so done by said dog or dogs, without proving notice to the owner or keeper of such dogs, or knowledge by him that his dog was mischievous, or disposed to kill or worry sheep ; and all laws conflicting with this section are hereby repealed.
“ Section 9. The county board of supervisors of any county, at their first meeting in any year, shall have power and are hereby authorized, by a vote of a majority of all the members elect of said board, to increase or diminish the sum set opposite the names of owners of dogs, as provided for in section two of this act, or at the said meeting by 'the said vote to determine whether or not during the then current year the "said county shall be exempt from or shall be governed by the provisions of this act; and said determination shall be binding on said county until reversed by said county board by a majority of the members elect of said county board.” The remainder of sec. 9 relates solely to the city and county of Milwaukee, and is unimportant in this case.
We are now to determine whether the legislature has power to authorize county boards of supervisors to exempt their respective counties from the provisions of sec. 8. The constitution (art. IV, sec. 1) ordains that “ The legislative power shall be vested in a senate and assembly.” Those bodies constitute the legislature. It is a settled maxim of constitutional-law, that the power thus conferred upon the legislature cannot be
But the question remains, whether sec. 8 may not still be upheld, notwithstanding the provision of sec. 9 which attempts to give the county board power to exempt the county therefrom, is void. It is the settled law in this state, that when a portion of an act is void, other portions, of the same act which if enacted without the void portion would be valid, will not be upheld unless it is apparent that the legislature would have enacted such portions alone had it been foreseen that the courts would declare the remainder of the act void. Slauson v. Racine, 13 Wis., 398; State ex rel. Walsh v. Dousman, 28 id., 541.
There is nothing in the act of 1871 from which it can be presumed that the legislature would have enacted sec. 8 unconditionally, had it been foreseen that the courts would hold that it could not be left to county boards to determine whether the provisions of that section should or should not prevail in' their respective counties. But the history of legislation on this sub
Hence it must be held that sec. 8, and the provision in sec. 9 authorizing the board of supervisors óf a county to exempt such county from the provisions thereof, must fall together. It follows that the common law rule of liability must govern the case, and that the court correctly instructed the jury that the defendant was not liable in the action unless he had previous notice of the vicious or mischievous propensity of his dog.
These views dispose of the case; yet it may be observed that were section 8 a valid law, the doubt expressed in Kertschacke v. Ludwig, 28 Wis., 430, as to whether it embraces a ease like this, would still remain.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.