(dissenting).
I do not agree to what is said in the foregoing opinion in regard to the *156effect of chapter 156 of the Acts of the Twenty-First General Assembly. Section 4058 of the Code, as amended by that act, provides as follows: “* * * Any railway company * * * who shall carry, ship or deliver any cattle into this state * * * which, at the time they were * * * brought, shipped or transported into this state were in such condition as to infect with or to communicate to other cattle, pleuro-pneumonia, or splenetic or Texas fever, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not less than three hundred dollars, and not more than one thousand dollars, or by both fine and imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months. * * *”■ In my opinion, the offense for which that section provides is one of the class referred to in 3 Greenleaf on Evidence, section 21, in the following language: “Where a statute commands that an act be done or omitted which, in the absence of such statute, might have been done without culpability, ignorance of the fact or state of things contemplated by the statute, it seems, will not excuse its violation. Thus, for example, when the law enacts the forfeiture of a ship having smuggled goods on board, and such goods are secreted on board by some of the crew, the owner and officers being alike innocently ignorant of the fact, yet the forfeiture is incurred, notwithstanding their ignorance. Such is also the case in regard to many other fiscal, police and other laws and regulations, for the mere violation of which, irrespective of the motives or knowledge of the party, certain penalties are enacted; for the law, in these cases, seems to bind the party to know the facts and to obey the law at his peril.’’ In Commonwealth v. Raymond, 97 Mass. 568, it is said to be the general rule, where' acts which are not evil in themselves are prohibited by law from motives of public policy, and not because of their moral turpitude *157or the criminal intent with which they are committed, that persons are bound to know the facts and obey the law at their peril. That doctrine I understand to be fully sustained by the authorities. Thus, in 1 Wharton on Criminal Law, section 88, it is said: “When a statute makes an act indictable irrespective of guilty knowledge, then ignorance of fact, no matter how sincere, is no defense. * * * The function of imposing indictability on pernicious acts, irrespective of intent, is one which has been exercised by legislatures, not only frequently, but from necessity.. * * * The question is one of policy; and this may be taken into consideration when the legislative meaning is sought. That a man should be convicted of a malicious act without proof of malice, or of a negligent act without proof of negligence, is of course an enormity which no legislature could be supposed to direct. But it is otherwise as to certain mischievous acts, which it may be a sound policy to prohibit arbitrarily, because they imperil public safety (as, for example, the selling of intoxicating drinks, and defective storing of explosive compounds), and because to require scienter to be proved would be to defeat the object of the statutes, since in many cases, and those the most dangerous of the class, it would be out of the power of the prosecution to prove scienter beyond reasonable doubt. * * The doctrine of the statements quoted is illustrated by the citation of numerous cases where persons were adjudged guilty of crimes by innocently doing acts which they believed, and had good reason to believe, were lawful; and the conclusion of the author is that honest ignorance of a fact maybe no more of a defense than honest ignorance of a law, and that honest belief that an illegal act is legal is not necessarily a defense in a criminal prosecution. See, also, State v. Hartfiel, 24 Wis. 60; 4 Am. and Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 689. The doctrine of the authorities cited was approved in *158the recent case of Commonwealth v. Weiss, 139 Pa. St. 247, 21 Atl. Rep. 10. A legislative enactment of that state, known as the ‘‘Oleomargarine Act,” provided that “no person, firm or corporate body shall manufacture out of any oleaginous substance or any compound of the same, other than that produced from unadulterated milk or cream from the same, any article designed to take the place of butter or cheese produced from pure unadulterated milk, or cream from the same, or of any imitations or adulterated butter or cheese, nor shall sell or offer for sale, or have in his, her or their possession with intent to sell the same as an article of food.” The act also provided that every person who should manufacture, sell, or offer or expose for sale, or have in his possession with intent to sell, any substance, the manufacture and sale of which is prohibited by the provision quoted, should for every ■such offense forfeit and pay the sum of one hundred dollars. The action named was commenced against the keeper of a restaurant to recover the statutory penalty for a violation of the law. It appeared that he had served a customer with oleomargarine, contrary to the provisions of the act specified, but that he did not knowingly furnish, or authorize to be furnished, to any ■of his customers, any oleomargarine, but so far as he knew, furnished genuine butter. In considering his guilt, the court said: “Whether a criminal intent or a guilty knowledge is a necessary ingredient of a statutory offense is a matter of construction.
“It is for the legislature to determine whether the public injury threatened in any particular matter is such, and so great, as to justify an absolute and indiscriminate prohibition, even if, in the honest prosecution of any particular trade or business, conducted for the manufacture of articles of food, the product is healthful and nutritious; yet, if the opportunities for fraud and adulteration are such as to threaten the pub-*159lie health, it is undoubtedly in the power of the legislature either to punish those who knowingly traffic in the fraudulent article, or, by a sweeping provision to that effect, to prohibit the manufacture and sale altogether. The question for us to decide, therefore, is whether or not, from the language of the statute, and in view of the manifest purpose and design of the same, the legislature intended that the legality or illegality of the sale should depend upon the ignorance of knowledge of the party charged. The statute in question was the exercise of the police power, and the act was sustained upon this ground, not only in this court, but. also in the supreme court of the United States. * * * The-, prohibition is absolute and general; it could not be expressed in terms more explicit and comprehensive. The statutory definition of the offense embraces no word implying that the forbidden act shall be done knowingly or willfully, and, if it did, the d.esign and purpose of the act would be practically defeated. The intention of the legislature is plain— that persons engaged in the traffic shall engage in it at their peril, and that they can not set up their ignorance of the nature and qualities of the commodities they sell as a defense.”
The rule of the authorities Cited has been frequently recognized by this court. In State v. Probasco, 62 Iowa, 401, 17 N. W. Rep. 607, it was held that if a minor was permitted to remain in a billiard saloon, in violation of the statute, the offense prescribed by the statute was committed, even though the keeper of the saloon did not know of the presence of the minor. See, also, State v. Thompson, 74 Iowa, 122, 37 N. W. Rep. 104. The same rule has been applied in cases involving acts wrong in themselves. Thus, in State v. Newton, 44 Iowa, 45, it was held that a person who made an assault on a female under the age of ten years for a purpose forbidden by section 3861 of the Code was guilty of *160a violation of section 3873, even though he did not know that the child was under that age. It was said that the crime did not depend upon the knowledge of defendant of the fact that the child was under ten years of age, but upon the fact itself. The case of State v. Ruhl, 8 Iowa, 449, announces a similar doctrine, and it is supported by numerous decisions in civil cases. In Dudley v. Sautbine, 49 Iowa, 650, it was held that, where the agent of the owner of a saloon sold intoxicating liquor to a person who was in the habit of becoming intoxicated in violation of law, his principal was liable, although the liquor was sold without his knowledge, and in violation of instructions he had given. See, also, Church v. Higham, 44 Iowa, 482. Where a person had the right to sell intoxicating liquor to some persons, but was prohibited from selling to a minor, he was guilty of a violation of the law in selling to a minor although he did not know that the purchaser had not attained his majority, and had good reason to suppose that he had. Jamison v. Burton, 43 Iowa, 282. If a person set fire to and burn, or cause to be burned, any prairie or timber land, and allow such fire to escape his control,- between the first day of September in any year and the first day of May following, he is absolutely liable for damages which result, and his liability is not affected by the degree of diligence he used to prevent the escape of the fire. Conn v. May, 36 Iowa, 241; Thoburn v. Campbell, 80 Iowa, 340, 45 N. W. Rep. 769.
Section 4059 of the Code, as amended by chapter 156 of the Acts of the Twenty-first General Assembly, provides that “any person who shall be injured or damaged by any of the acts of the persons named in section 4058, and which are prohibited by such section, in addition to the remedy therein provided, may bring an action at law against any such persons, agents, employees or corporations mentioned therein, and recover the actual damages sustained by the person or persons *161so injured, and neither said criminal proceeding nor said civil action, in any stage of the same, shall be a bar to a conviction or to a recovery in the other.” This section authorizes a recovery for damages which were caused by any of the acts prohibited by the preceding section. It follows that if they may be committed without knowledge of the condition of the cattle, although reasonable care had been exercised to ascertain it, and without an evil intent, persons injured by them may recover damages caused thereby, without regard to the knowledge or intent of the persons who committed them, and without regard to the diligence they used to avoid them. The right of recovery extends to all acts causing damage which are made criminal by the statute. Section 4058 is in the nature of a police regulation. In Railway Co. v. Husen, 95 U. S. 465, it was admitted that, in the exercise of its police powers, a state may enact laws for the protection of property within its borders, and to that end may exclude animals having contagious or infectious diseases; and the same doctrine has been announced in other cases and is well settled.
It is said, however, that the statute under consideration, so far as the rule of liability thereunder is involved is not essentially different from that construed in Small v. Railway Co., 50 Iowa, 338, and that the doctrine of that case should be applied in this. It does not seem to me that there is anything to justify the presumption that the general assembly intended to incorporate the doctrine of the Small case in its revision of sections 4058 and 4059 of the Code. The originals of those sections were enacted by the twelfth general assembly in the year 1868, and were incorporated, in a modified form, in the Code of 1873, nearly six years before the opinion in the Small case was filed. Both the act of 1868 and the Code made it unlawful for any one to *162bring into the state Texas cattle, and provided for the recovery of damages by persons injured by violations of the law, and contained nothing to indicate that such violations would depend upon the knowledge or negligence of the person who should bring the cattle into the state. In that respect those- statutes were in legal effect, the same as the act of the twenty-first general assembly. An additional reason for concluding that the general assembly did not intend to adopt, in the act of 1886, the construction placed upon section 1289 in the Small case, is the fact that the opinion in that case was founded almost wholly upon considerations which have no application to the act under consideration; The portion of section 1289 construed in the Small case is as follows: “Any corporation operating a railway shall be liable for all damages by fire that is set out or caused by operating of any such railway, and such damage may be recovered by the party damaged in the same manner as set forth in this section in regard to stock.” The court said: “The first clause of the provision might seem to create an absolute liability. It makes the company liable for all fires caused by the operating of its road. If this provision stood alone, it would go far to support the plaintiff's construction (that the liability created is absolute, not depending on the negligence of defendant), although it would no.t necessarily sustain it, as we will hereafter endeavor to show.” ’ The court concluded that the liability was not absolute, for the reasons, first, that the first clause was coupled with a provision which provided for the manner of recovery; second, that when a fire occurs in the legitimate use of railway property, without fault in the „ mode of use, and simply by the intervention of an uncontrollable element of nature, the cause of the fire is to be referred to the element, and not to the use; third, that in paying the damages for its right of way the railway company compensates the property owner for *163the dangers to which his property is exposed by operating the railway; fourth, that the statute was of doubtful construction, audit was, therefore, proper to give some weight to what might be considered as demanded ■or forbidden by the public interest; fifth, that contributory negligence of the property owner would defeat recovery when the corporation was in fault, and should also defeat it when the corporation was not in fault. It -seems to me apparent that the first, second and third grounds of the opinion, as I have stated them, do not exist in this case. The language used in the statute of 1886 is not doubtful, but direct and clear, and the policy of the statute is not a matter for judicial consideration. The conclusion of the opinion, .that the •corporation is not liable when the property owner is guilty of contributory negligence, is contrary to the rule adopted by this court in West v. Railway Co., 77 Iowa, 654, 35 N. W. Rep. 479, and 42 N. W. Rep. 512, and other cases. Whether the decision in the Small case is correct is, it seems to me, a question whieh is not involved in this case, and which there is no occasion to determine.
The Kansas cases cited in the opinion of the majority rest in part upon a statute enacted after the one which was directly involved, but upon the same subject, which provided that, when the cattle which communicated the disease were brought into the state from a place south of the thirty-seventh parallel of north latitude, that fact should be taken as prima facie evidence that the cattle were capable of communicating, and liable to impart, the disease, and that the owner or person in charge of the cattle had full knowledge and notice thereof. Our statutes contain no provision of that kind. It is said the principle stated in 3 O-reenleaf on Evidence, section 21, “can have no application to one who, in the pursuit of a lawful calling, and in the exercise of proper care and caution, does an *164act contrary to some statutory requirement.” So far as that statement refers to acts which are prohibited by statutes, without regard to the knowledge or intent with which they are committed, and especially those in the nature of police regulations, it seems to me to bo contrary to the authorities, including decisions of this court, and not to be well founded in reason. It is well settled that honest ignorance of the law will not excuse its violation, and in many cases it is as reasonable and as consistent with a due regard to liberty and property to provide that honest ignorance of a fact shall not excuse a violation of a law which is demanded by public policy.
The oleomargarine act of Pennsylvania does not prohibit the acts therein contemplated in terms any more direct and positive than does the statute under consideration, and the language used by the supreme court of that state which I have quoted is, in the main, applicable in this case. The statutory definition of the offense charged against defendant “embraces no word implying that the forbidden act shall be done knowingly or willfully, and, if it did, the design and purpose of the act would be practically defeated.” The general assembly intended to protect the large and growing cattle interests of this state from the danger to which they would be exposed if cattle in the condition specified in the act should be brought into the state. It was for the general assembly to determine whether that danger, and the interests threatened, were “so great as to justify an absolute and indiscriminate prohibition.” If a railway corporation may excuse its act in bringing into this state prohibited cattle on the ground that it did not know their condition, and could not, with ordinary and reasonable care, have ascertained it, then it seems to me evident that the statute must fail to accomplish its purpose to a great extent, if not wholly; and that is especially true if the corporation may be required to receive such *165cattle, and deliver them to the consignee within this state, without regard to their condition; and I understand the opinion of the majority to hold, in effect, that when a loaded car, although containing prohibited animals, is tendered to such corporation, it is its duty to receive and forward it, and to act promptly in •doing so, and that such duty may forbid such a delay as would he required to ascertain their condition. That it is necessary to so hold to sustain the opinion appears from the fact that, if the mere conclusions set •out in the portion of the answer demurred to are disregarded, no effort whatever on the part of the defendant to ascertain the condition of the cow is shown. The theory of the answer seems to. be that as the defendant had no actual knowledge of the condition of the cow, and could not have ascertained it readily by inquiry, it would not have been justified in delaying to receive and forward the car until it could ascertain the fact. If that is the law (and under the rule of the majority •opinion it seems to be), the cases in which railway corporations bringing prohibited cattle into this state can not show lack of knowledge must be few; for such ■cattle will ordinarily be received from other railways, loaded in ears, and forming part, or all, of full car loads, and the obligation to receive and forward them without delay will be as pressing as it was in this case. It is said that the objection that, under the construction adopted by the majority, the statute will have little, if any, effect, is groundless, and the result of the decision in the Small case is cited in support of that statement. But the character of the eases contemplated by section 1289 of the Code is wholly unlike those for which the statute under consideration provides. When property is destroyed by fire from a locomotive engine, the circumstances attending its destruction are, or may become, fully known to the owner, and proof of them is readily obtainable. For that reason he may be able *166to overcome the prima facie showing of the railway company that its engines were in good order, and that it was free from negligence in setting the fires. But to rebut proof of care, and want of knowledge, on the-part of the company in cases arising under the statute-in controversy, the person injured would he compelled to seek evidence of a kind difficult, if not impossible, to-ascertain, beyond the limits of the state and in unknown ' quarters, and practically he would be in the power of' the company. I do not think that a railway company can be compelled to receive and bring into this state, without delay, freight in car lots which includes prohibited cattle. The act prohibiting them is valid, and, so long as it stands, its violation is not required by any act of congress or of the general assembly.
The hardship involved in holding the defendant-liable if it could not, with reasonable diligence, have-discovered the actual condition of the cow, is evident, and might well be considered by the general assembly in determining whether criminal liability should be-incurred in such cases; but, so long as the statute-creates the liability, the courts should not interfere to-defeat the legislative purpose. That hardship and” apparent injustice sometimes result from the enforcement of criminal statutes is inevitable; but that is not-a sufficient reason for not enforcing them, nor for-adopting a rule of construction which may do justice-in exceptional cases, but which will tend to defeat it in others. In this case it would not be a greater hardship-to require defendant to pay the damages which its act in bringing the cow into the state caused than it is for the plaintiff to sustain it without compensation, and, if both parties are equally free from negligence or intentional wrong, there would be an element of justice frequently recognized by the courts in compelling the one whose act caused the loss to bear it.- That the statute in question was intended to create an absolute *167liability for the bringing into the state of prohibited cattle, without regard to the knowledge or intent with which it was done, is further shown by the general course of procedure in regard to ¡criminal statutes which was pursued by the general assembly which enacted it. That body passed seventeen acts which were of a criminal character, or contained penal provisions. Two of them — chapter 66 of the Acts of the Twenty-First G-eneral Assembly, relating to the sale of intoxicating liquors, and chapter 83, relating to the practice of pharmacy — related to subjects upon which it is admitted the general assembly may properly legislate, creating liability for prohibited acts without regard to the knowledge with which they are committed, and need not be considered. Of the remaining fifteen, chapter 30, relating to embezzlement; chapter 63, relating to fish dams; chapter 76, relating to foreign corporations; chapter 78, relating to the funding of indebtedness of certain cities; chapter 79, prohibiting traffic in hogs which died of disease; chapter 104, regulating the practice of medicine; chapter 117, relating to mortgaged personal property; chapter 148, providing for a custodian of public buildings; chapter 161, in regard to elections; and chapter 177, relating to obscene literature, — contained provisions of a penal nature, without in terms making knowledge or intent an element of the act prohibited; but in each case the act is of such a nature as necessarily to involve knowledge, or negligence in not obtaining it. Chapter 52, relating to imitation of butter and cheese; chapter 65, relating to mutual benefit associations; chapter 165, relating to the sale and transfer of grain; and chapter 174, to prevent fraud in canned food, — create offenses which may, for convenience, be divided into two classes: First. Those which involve the doing of an act prohibited, or the omission of an act commanded, where knowledge that the act or omission is unlawful *168exists from the nature of the case, unless there has been negligence to obtain it; and, in those cases, words requiring knowledge as an element of the offense are not used in the statute. Second. Those acts or omissions which are prohibited, [but which are not made criminal, unless the act or omission is with knowledge that it is unlawful; and in the definitions of those offenses — some eight or more in all — the word “knowingly” is used in each case. Thus, section 2 of chapter 52 makes it a misdemeanor for any person who manufactures imitation butter or cheese to omit to mark it in the manner prescribed in4he act.1' It is not said that the manufacturer must know of the omission in order to commit the offense, but it is within his power to know and prevent it. The next four sections provide for various offenses, but make knowledge a necessary element of each of them, in terms which can not be misunderstood. Thus, section 3 provides that “no carrier shall knowingly receive for the purpose of forwarding or transporting any imitation butter or imitation cheese,” unless it shall be marked and consigned in the manner prescribed. Section 8 makes the possession or control of imitation butter or cheese, not marked as required by the act, presumptive evidence of knowledge on the part of the person having such possession or control. Chapter 156 is the only one of the seventeen Acts of the Twenty-First General Assembly referred to, if chapter 66 be excepted, which prohibits an act which may be committed' in honest ignorance that it is forbidden, without, in terms, making knowledge that it was forbidden necessary to a conviction. The general assembly was careful to provide that a carrier should not be liable to a fine of not more than one hundred dollars, nor to imprisonment not exceeding thirty days, for receiving imitation butter or cheese not properly marked and consigned, unless it was done with knowledge of the fact. The omission to provide *169'that the acts prohibited by the statute under consideration must be done with knowledge to create the heavier criminal liability, civil liability, in view of the rule followed in other cases, is most significant. It seems to me the omission can have but one explanation, and that is that in enacting chapter 156 the general ■assembly designed to make the prohibited act penal, ■and to create an absolute liability, without regard to ■the knowledge of the party committing it. The facts in this case tend strongly to justify the general assembly in adopting stringent measures to keep out of the state cattle in the condition described in the statute. The bringing into the state of one cow resulted in the ■death of thirty-two cattle owned by the plaintiff. If ■shipments into the state of cattle in condition to communicate to other cattle the disease contemplated by the statute were numerous, the loss which such shipments might cause to the cattle industries of the state is beyond computation. That fact was known to the general assembly when the statute was enacted, and no doubt was felt to be a sufficient justification of the severe provisions which it contains. It seems to me that the interpretation of the statute adopted in the ■opinion of the majority is contrary to the legislative intent, and that its practical effect will be to defeat the legislative will.