Birket v. Williams

Lacey, P. J.

This was a suit in trespass quare clausum fregit by appellee against appellant, and the second count for trespass of defendant’s cattle pasturing on the lands of appellee and destroying his nursery trees.

There was a plea of the general issue and plea to the second count that the said close was not fenced by a good and sufficient fence, to which latter plea the court below sustained a demurrer, and appellant abided his plea.

This demurrer was properly sustained, for the reason that Sec. 1, Chap. 8, R. S. 1874, which was in force in Peoria county, practically re-enacts the common law upon the subject of permitting cattle to run at large, and now, in this State, ¿where the statute is in force, every man must keep his cattle from his neighbor’s premises or respond in damages for injuries committed by them. Lee v. Burk, 15 Ill. App. 651. The appellee’s close consisted of a piece of ground of over six acres, and he had occupied it since March, 1886, and it was leased of appellant. It was used to raise nursery stock and small fruit trees, the stock being composed of apple trees, pear trees, cherry trees, plum trees, shade trees, evergreens and small fruits. The appellant had been in possession five or six years. The fence through which appellant’s cattle escaped was a wire fence separating the appellee’s nursery from the inclosure of appellant. It was a partition fence. It is insisted on the part of appellant that Sec. 1 should bé so construed that if the cattle escape without fault of the owner and commit damages on the premises of another, the owner is not liable. We do not so construe the law. The common law always did prevail as to partition fences, and by the statute it governs as to outside fences. Lee v. Burk, above; and as to partition fences, see Seeley v. Peters, 5 Gilm. 130 ; Stoner v. Shugart, 45 Ill. 76.

By the common law every man was bound to keep his cattle on his own land or respond in damages for their trespasses. D’Arcy v. Miller, 86 Ill. 102. The appellant cites in support of his proposition that the common law is not re-enacted by said Sec. 1. Certain cases, Kinder v. Gillespie, 63 Ill. 88 ; Town of Collinsville v. Scanland, 58 Ill. 221; Wede v. Shed, 9 Ill. App. 226, and like cases, are cited. The most of the cases cited are where a penalty is sought to be recovered, and have no application. The case above cited in 9 Ill. App., arose under a special statute against bulls running at large, and has no application, and has reference to the special liability of the owner, who was not the custodian.

We see no grounds for variance between the proof and declaration, even if the point had been raised in the court below, which it was not. The declaration is sufficiently broad to cover common law liability for trespass for stock.

It is insisted that other stock committed trespasses, and the damages done by them could not be distinguished from the damages done by appellant’s stock, and therefore the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict, which is $100. We have carefully examined the evidence and are satisfied ther<* was abundance of proof to sustain the verdict, and that it would have sustained a larger amount.

We do not think that the sixth and seventh instructions complained of, given for appellee, are justly liable to the criticisms made. The sixth, fairly read, does not assume that there were actual damages, and the objection to the seventh, that it does not require the damages to be proven, is not well taken. Fairly read, it does require such proof. The modification of appellee’s second instruction is not error. The measure of damages was not improperly stated. It was proper to recover for damages to the market value of the trees. The damages recovered were less than five cents per tree for the number of trees shown to have been browsed off by appellant’s sheep and cattle, and according to the evidence that was very moderate.

The judgment is therefore affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.