47 N.J.L. 237 | N.J. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An action was brought in the name of the defendants, against the prosecutor, for a penalty of $100, under section 13 of “An act for the prevention of cruelty to animals,” approved March 11th, 1880. Pamph. L., p. 212. Before a justice of the peace and jury a verdict for six cents damages was rendered against the prosecutor. From this judgment an ajipeal was taken to the Court of Common Pleas, which reversed the judgment below and gave judgment for $20 against the prosecutor. This certiorari brings up this latter judgment for review.
The statute referred to (section 13) enacts, among other things, that any persons who shall torture, torment or cruelly beat, or who shall, by their agents, servants, employees or otherwise, cause or procure to be tortured, tormented or to be unnecessarily or cruelly beaten, or otherwise abused, any living animal or creature, <&c., shall forfeit and pay such sum? not to exceed $100, together with costs, as the court shall determine, to be sued for and recovered in an action of debt, with costs of suit, by any person or persons, in the name of the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, before any justice of the peace, &c. Only such words are above quoted from the statute as are applicable to the present case.
The form of summons is given in section 14 of the act, amended in the supplement of 1883, {Pamph. L., p. 159,) to apply to section 13 only, and appeal is given in the same way
A sworn complaint was filed with the justice in this case, before the summons was issued, setting forth that the prosecutor did, by his agent and employee, cruelly torture, torment and beat one living animal, to wit,, one mule, &c., and did, by such agent, beat such mule by striking him many times with a heavy whip, using the butt end, &c., besides kicking the mule many times.
Under the terms of the statute this complaint must be treated as a state of demand setting out the plaintiff’s cause of action, and the proceedings must be conducted in the usual form of an action of debt for a penalty where not controlled by the express terms of the statute. The record sent up shows that on the trial of the appeal the defendant moved for a non-suit because the complaint did not allege that the defendant did the act complained of or that he caused or procured it to be done. This motion was overruled because it did not appear by the transcript that this objection was taken below. In Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 10 Vroom 400, section 13, as found in the laws of 1873, (Pamph. L.,p. 80; Rev.,p. 26,) was construed by this court, and it was held that on an appeal taken the party is entitled to relief, both as to matter of law and fact, as in other cases of appeals from justices of the peace, under the act constituting courts for the trial of small causes. The later acts have made no change in this respect.
On appeals from the courts for the trial of small causes, the action is tried de novo, on its merits, and only objections which go to the form of the remedy, without questioning the right of the plaintiff to recover, are waived by the failure to present them before the justice. Burk v. Shreve, 10 Vroom 214.
No authority appears from the master to cruelly kick or strike with the butt of the whip this mule because it slipped and fell on the ice. This was the wilful, malicious act of the servant in the absence of the master, and there is no presumption that the act was approved, but rather that it would naturally be condemned by the owner of the animal. To say, therefore, that the defendant, by his agent and employee, acted cruelly, is an inference founded on no facts shown, and is not equivalent to causing or procuring it to be done, which implies knowledge and an active participation.
The testimony of the witnesses before the Court of Common Pleas made out no case for the plaintiff, and there should have been a non-suit. Several were examined, and all agreed with the defendant and his witnesses that he was not present, took no part in the act complained of, and had no knowledge of it until some one who knew him went to his coal-yard, some distance away, and called him to stop the cruelty of his driver, which he immediately did. When the testimony is thus all one way, credible and unimpeached, the court and jury must not disregard it, and if they do, the judgment of the court in opposition thereto will be reversed. Cooley v. Barcroft, 14 Vroom 363. Upon the record and the case, as here presented, the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas will be reversed.