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(OTILIA
MOGUEL |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(WILWORTH
JONES
By Original Action |
DEFENDANT |
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(WILWORTH
JONES
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PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(OTILIA
MOGUEL
(NATHANIEL MOGUEL
By Counterclaim |
DEFENDANTS |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 127 of 1980
7th August 1984
Moe, C.J.
Mr. Denys
Barrow for the Plaintiff
Mr. N. Dujon for the Defendant
Claim
for damages for killing of plaintiff's bull by defendant's
bull - allegation of mischievous propensity in defendant's
bull not proved - evidence showing defendant's bull caused
death of plaintiff's bull - defendant's bull at the time
trespassing on land in occupation of plaintiff - duty of
defendant to prevent trespass by his bull - defendant liable
for all natural consequences of the trespass and so for
death of plaintiff's bull -submission that pleas of scienter
and negligence bar plaintiff from relying on cattle trespass
- failure to describe entry as "wrongful" in pleading
not bar to reliance on cattle trespass - counterclaim for
damage to 11 acres of defendants' cane not allowed - loss
specifically pleaded not established - judgment for plaintiff
in the sum of $1800.00 with interest thereon at 6%.
J U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff
claimed damages for injury done by the Defendant's bull on
19th February, 1980. He pleaded firstly:
"2.
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The
Defendant's bull was of a fierce and mischievous disposition
and accustomed to attack and gore other cattle, and
the Defendant wrongfully kept the said bull, well knowing
that it was of such fierce and mischievous nature and
so accustomed. |
3 |
On
or about February 19th, 1980 the Defendant's bull entered
a pasture in the occupation of the Plaintiff and attacked
and gored the Plaintiff's bull which was feeding thereon,
killing the Plaintiff's said bull. |
3A |
In
the alternative, the Defendant negligently allowed his
said bull to stray into the said pasture in the occupation
of the Plaintiff and there to attack and gore and kill
the Plaintiff's bull." |
The Defendant
denied scienter. While admitting that the Plaintiff's
bull was killed by his bull, he averred that the death was
occasioned by the Plaintiff's bull escaping from its pasture
and provoking the Defendant's bull.
It was
conceded that the allegation of mischievous propensity in
the Defendant's bull was not established. There was clear
evidence that about 8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. on the 19th February,
1980 the Defendant's bull was on the pasture occupied by the
Plaintiff and about 25 yards from a wire fence which separates
the Plaintiff's pasture from the land in the occupation of
the Defendant. At that spot, the Defendant's bull fought with
and gored the Plaintiff's bull. The Defendant himself chased
his bull from that spot about 9:00 a.m. The Plaintiff's bull
died from the injuries it received from the Defendant's bull.
I held
that the Defendant's bull, at the time, was trespassing on
land in the occupation of the Plaintiff. The Defendant had
a duty to prevent his bull from trespassing on the land in
the occupation of the Plaintiff. The Defendant is liable for
all the natural consequences of the trespass and thus liable
for the death of the Plaintiff's bull.
It was
submitted by Counsel for the Defendant that the Plaintiff,
having pleaded scienter as in paragraphs 2 and 3 and
negligence in paragraph 3A, cannot now succeed on the basis
of cattle trespass. In my view, while paragraphs 2 and 3 of
the Statement of Claim, as set out above, alleged injury committed
by an animal known to be of mischievous disposition and wrongfully
kept, paragraph 3 by itself raised the issue of trespass.
Although the paragraph does not contain the word "wrongfully"
before the word "entered", I do not think that the
Plaintiff's claim must fail on the basis of that omission.
The Plaintiff
satisfied me as to the value of the bull killed and I allow
the amount claimed, $1,800.00.
The Defendant
counterclaimed against the Plaintiff and joined her husband,
Nathaniel Moguel, to this claim alleging that "Between
the months of December, 1979 and February, 1980, their cattle
strayed into and trespassed upon the Plaintiff's to counterclaim
said canefield and ate the cane growing thereon and caused
damage". He gave particulars of damage resulting to 11
acres of cane: $24,984.00.
The Defendant's
evidence was that in June 1979, just after the rain, he planted
11 acres of cane which he intended to sell to the sugar factory.
Almost every day the Plaintiffs' cattle came through and ate
down the canes. By February 19th, 1980 the 11 acres were totally
destroyed. He later said that at the time his canes were destroyed
by the Plaintiff's cattle, the canes were 8 months old; that
is, they were eaten about February 1980. The 11 acres is about
100 yards behind the Defendant's house. He said a creek runs
through the 11 acres east to west with about 3 acres to the
south of the creek. He should have got about 400 tons out
of the 11 acres and a price of $61.82 per ton. However, evidence
of his witness, whom he had employed to cut cane, was that
he cut cane behind the Defendant's house continuously between
4th January and 19th February 1980. By that date, in that
area, he and the other workers had finished cutting cane near
to the boundary between the Defendant's and the Plaintiff's,
leaving about 30 tasks to be cut from 5th May, 1980. The cane-cutter's
evidence, as I understood it, was a direct contradiction of
the Defendant's evidence, the cutter's evidence being that
in that section of the Defendant's canes near to the boundary
with the Plaintiff's land, canes had either been cut down
to be sent to the factory or canes were left standing to be
cut down. This was not consistent with the evidence of there
being no canes over 11 acres. Consequently, although I accepted
that the Plaintiff's cattle had from time to time gone into
the Defendant's field and eaten cane, the Defendant did not
establish the loss specifically pleaded and I did not allow
the amount claimed under that item.
Judgment
for the Plaintiff in the sum of $1,800.00 with cost thereon
at 6% from 5th May 1980.
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