Pierson V Post
Pierson V Post
Pierson V Post
certainty, and preserving peace and order in society. If the first seeing, starting or pursuing
such animals, without having so wounded, circumvented or ensnared them, so as to
deprive them of their natural liberty, and subject them to the control of their pursuer,
should afford the basis of actions against others for intercepting and killing them, it would
prove a fertile source of quarrels and litigation.
However uncourteous or unkind the conduct of Pierson towards Post, in this instance, may
have been, yet this act was productive of no injury or damage for which a legal remedy can
be applied. We are of opinion the judgment below was erroneous, and ought to be
reversed.
LIVINGSTON, J. My opinion differs from that of the court. Of six exceptions, taken to the
proceedings below, all are abandoned except the third, which reduces the controversy to a
single question.
Whether a person who, with his own hounds, starts and hunts a fox on waste and
uninhabited ground, and is on the point of seizing his prey, acquires such an interest in the
animal as to have a right of action against another, who in view of the huntsman and his
dogs in full pursuit, and with knowledge of the chase, shall kill and carry him away.
This is a knotty point, and should have been submitted to the arbitration of sportsmen,
without poring over Justinian, Fleta, Bracton, Puffendorf, Locke, Barbeyrac, or
Blackstone, all of whom have been cited: they would have had no difficulty in coming to a
prompt and correct conclusion. In a court thus constituted, the skin and carcass of poor
Reynard would have been properly disposed of, and a precedent set, interfering with no
usage or custom which the experience of ages has sanctioned, and which must be so well
known to every votary of Diana. But the parties have referred the question to our
judgment, and we must dispose of it as well as we can, from the partial lights we possess,
leaving to a higher tribunal the correction of any mistake which we may be so unfortunate
as to make. By the pleadings it is admitted that a fox is a "wild and noxious beast." Both
parties have regarded him, as the law of nations does a pirate, "hostem humani generis,"
and although "de mortuis nil nisi bonum" be a maxim of our profession, the memory of the
deceased has not been spared. His depredations on farmers and on barnyards, have not
been forgotten; and to put him to death wherever found, is allowed to be meritorious, and
of public benefit. Hence it follows, that our decision should have in view the greatest
possible encouragement to the destruction of an animal, so cunning and ruthless in his
career. But who would keep a pack of hounds; or what gentleman, at the sound of the horn,
and at peep of day, would mount his steed, and for hours together, "sub jove frigido," or a
vertical sun, pursue the windings of this wily quadruped, if, just as night came on, and his
stratagems and strength were nearly exhausted, a saucy intruder, who had not shared in the
honors or labors of the chase, were permitted to come in at the death, and bear away in
triumph the object of pursuit? Whatever Justinian may have thought of the matter, it must
be recollected that his code was compiled many hundred years ago, and it would be very
hard indeed, at the distance of so many centuries, not to have a right to establish a rule for
ourselves. In his day, we read of no order of men who made it a business, in the language
of the declaration in this cause, "with hounds and dogs to find, start, pursue, hunt, and
chase," these animals, and that, too, without any other motive than the preservation of
Roman poultry; if this diversion had been then in fashion, the lawyers who composed his
institutes, would have taken care not to pass it by, without suitable encouragement. If
anything, therefore, in the digests or pandects shall appear to militate against the defendant
in error, who, on this occasion, was the fox hunter, we have only to say tempora mutantur;
and if men themselves change with the times, why should not laws also undergo an
alteration?
It may be expected, however, by the learned counsel, that more particular notice be taken
of their authorities. I have examined them all, and feel great difficulty in determining,
whether to acquire dominion over a thing, before in common, it be sufficient that we barely
see it, or know where it is, or wish for it, or make a declaration of our will respecting it; or
whether, in the case of wild beasts, setting a trap, or lying in wait, or starting, or pursuing,
be enough; or if an actual wounding, or killing, or bodily tact and occupation be necessary.
Writers on general law, who have favored us with their speculations on these points, differ
on them all; but, great as is the diversity of sentiment among them, some conclusion must
be adopted on the question immediately before us. After mature deliberation, I embrace
that of Barbeyrac as the most rational and least liable to objection. If at liberty, we might
imitate the courtesy of a certain emperor, who, to avoid giving offense to the advocates of
any of these different doctrines, adopted a middle course, and by ingenious distinctions,
rendered it difficult to say (as often happens after a fierce and angry contest) to whom the
palm of victory belonged. He ordained, that if a beast be followed with large dogs and
hounds, he shall belong to the hunter, not to the chance occupant; and in like manner, if he
be killed or wounded with a lance or sword; but if chased with beagles only, then he
passed to the captor, not to the first pursuer. If slain with a dart, a sling, or a bow, he fell to
the hunter, if still in chase, and not to him who might afterwards find and seize him.
Now, as we are without any municipal regulations of our own, and the pursuit here, for
aught that appears on the case, being with dogs and hounds of imperial stature, we are at
liberty to adopt one of the provisions just cited, which comports also with the learned
conclusion of Barbeyrac, that property in animals feroe naturoe may be acquired without
bodily touch or manucaption, provided the pursuer be within reach, or have a reasonable
prospect (which certainly existed here) of taking what he has thus discovered an intention
of converting to his own use.
When we reflect also that the interest of our husbandmen, the most useful of men in any
community, will be advanced by the destruction of a beast so pernicious and incorrigible,
we cannot greatly err in saying that a pursuit like the present, through waste and
unoccupied lands, and which must inevitably and speedily have terminated in corporeal
possession, or bodily seisin, confers such a right to the object of it, as to make any one a
wrong-doer who shall interfere and shoulder the spoil. The justice's judgment ought,
therefore, in my opinion, to be affirmed.
Judgment of reversal.