36 Vt. 101 | Vt. | 1863
This is an action for the recovery of the penalty provided by the statute, (Acts of 1856, No. 54,- p. 58,) for the restraining of rams from running at large. The statute provides that “ if any ram or rams shall be found with the- sheep of any other person,” betwefen the first day of August and the first day of 'December in any year, '“the owner or keeper of such sheep may recover of the owner or keeper of such ram or rams,” a penalty of five dollars “ for not restraining” such ram or rams from going at large. The evidence on the trial tended to show that the ram escaped into the inclosure, where the plaintiff’s sheep were kept, by reason of the insufficiency of a portion of the division fence between that inclosure and the plaintiff’s land, which it was the duty of the plaintiff to maintain and keep in repair, and by reason of the neglect of the plaintiff to keep this portion of the fence in repair ; and the charge of the court, as well as the whole theory of the trial, rested on the ground that the ne'glect of the plaintiff to maintain and keep his portion of the division fence in repair, if not' qualifying the defendant’s duty to restrain his rams from running at large, should be taken
We are disposed to adhere to the construction of the statute adopted in the case of Hall v. Adams, and to hold that the.penalty is incurred if the ram is found ofi' from its owner’s or keeper’s premises and with the sheep of another, unless it is made to appear ■ 'his was caused by some positive wrongful act of the prosecutor nimself, or could not have been 'prevented by the utmost care and diligence of the owner or keeper. As the trial in the county court was controlled by instructions to the jury-enforcing a different construction of the statute, the judgment of' that court is reversed, and the' ca.se is to be remanded to that court for a new trial. This view of the law of the case renders the consideration of the other points arising from the bill of exceptions wholly unnecessary,