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VERDICT-SENTENCE.

limits of this county, under the law of this State he would be guilty of libel and your verdict should be guilty.

If you are controlled by a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, that doubt should inure to the benefit of the defendant.

The facts are before you. The case is within very narrow limits, and it is for you to decide from the evidence whether the defendant, Alfred L. Shaffner, be guilty or not guilty, either of writing and publishing, or of publishing, in this county the language charged in this indictment.

SENTENCE OF THE COURT.

Verdict guilty.

LORE, C. J.:-Alfred L. Shaffner, stand up: The offense of which the jury have found you guilty is a very serious one. The libel you uttered was of a political nature, and in the excitement of political times likely to do much harin, as such rumors are then more readily believed. You have involved innocent men in the publication and the transaction, and in that way blackened, so far as the public would believe you, their character. You tried to take away from these people their good names. While the Court feel great sympathy for you because of your youth, and while we know nothing of the circumstances surrounding the case, or how you may have been tempted, yet we feel that crimes of this character ought to be punished. It was a base assault upon the reputations of most reputable men in this county, and deserves severe punishment, whatever may have been your motive.

The sentence of the Court in No. 26 is that you be imprisoned for the term of one year, commencing on this day and ending on the eighteenth day of May, nineteen hundred; that you pay the costs of the prosecution, and you are committed to the custody of the sheriff until this sentence is carried into effect.

In No. 27, the sentence of the Court is that you be imprisoned for the term of one year commencing on the eighteenth day of May,

SYLLABUS.

nineteen hundred, and ending on the seventeenth day of May, nineteen hundred and one; that you pay the costs of the prosecution in that case, and you are now committed to the custody of the sheriff until this sentence is carried into effect.

VINCENT O. HILL vs. JAMES GINN, et al.

Replevin-Impounding Live Stock Running at Large- Written Notice Statute Abrogating Common Law-Damages.

I. A statute which treats of the whole of any subject matter, abrogates the common law on that subject, as a subsequent statute treating of the whole subject matter of a previous statute will be a virtual repeal of the previous statute.

2. The common law right of securing damages by impounding cattle running at large on uninclosed lands is abrogated by the statute of this State passed March 2, 1893-Rev. Code, 482.

3. The said statute provides that a written notice shall be given to the owner of the stock, and it must be proved at the trial that such notice was given, otherwise the plaintiff must recover such loss as he sustained by the detention of his property. But he cannot recover in this action for any injuries to the stock during the detention thereof.

(May 22, 1899.)

LORE, C. J., and GRUBB and PENNEWILL, J. J., sitting.

Thomas Davis for plaintiff.

E. R. Cochran, Jr., for defendants.

Superior Court, New Castle County, May Term, 1899.

STATEMENT OF CASE.

ACTION OF REPLEVIN (No. 6, Sept. Term, 1897). At the trial it was proved that the defendant, about May 28, 1897, impounded the five horses of the plaintiff, taking them from his farm to the farm of his son, some four or five miles distant. That the plaintiff thereupon recovered possession of the horses by writ of replevin; and the action was brought to recover damages for injuries to, and the loss of services of, the horses while in the possession of the defendant.

The defendant claimed that he took the horses while trespassing on his wheat field, and justified in avowry for damage feasant, claiming total damages of $24.00; the items being as follows: 3 appraisers at $1.00, $3.00; impounding 5 head of horses, $5.00; feeding five head of horses at 25c. each for 8 days, $10.00; serving notice, 50c.; Justice of the Peace, $1.50; other damages, $1.00; damage to wheat, $3.00.

The defendant testified that he served forthwith notice upon the plaintiff, but did not state whether it was a written or verbal

notice.

The defendant's counsel admitted that the stock accidentally escaped from the field of the plaintiff, and that the field upon which the horses trespassed was unenclosed on the side next to the public road, and that the horses entered said field from the public road. Plaintiff proved that he sent after the horses early the next morning after learning that they had escaped from his field.

When the testimony of both sides was concluded, Mr. Davis, counsel for plaintiff, moved that the Court instruct the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff, on the following grounds:

First. That the circumstances showed that the defendant's avowry was made under the statute (Rev. Code, 482, Chap. 557, Sec. 2), which was a remedial statute and should be strictly complied with; that said statute required that the defendant should have given forthwith written notice of the impounding of the plaintiff's horses, whereas there was no proof that there was a writen notice given.

CHARGE OF COURT.

Second. By the testimony of the defendant, the horses escaped accidentally from the enclosure where they were feeding, and the said statute (Rev. Code, 43. Sec. 5) did not apply to stock accidentally escaped; that animals escaped from their owner's enclosure are not considered as running at large.

McBride vs. Hechlin, 124 Ind., 500.

Third. That where horses escape from enclosure against the will of the owner, and he immediately searches for them, they are not running at large.

Kinder vs. Gillespie, 63 Ill., 89.

Mr. Cochran contended that he was proceeding under the common law, and not under the statute; that the statute did not abrogate the common law.

Hanes vs. Wise, 4 Harr., 243.

The Court refused to give immediate peremptory instructions as asked for, but stated that they would pass upon the points raised in the charge to the jury.

PENNEWILL, J., charging the jury:

Gentlemen of the jury:-This case, which seemed quite simple at the outset, has developed an important question of law, which we have as carefully considered as we could in the limited time afforded us, and upon that we are now ready to give our decision.

This is an action of replevin, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover certain damages for an alleged unlawful taking or detention by the defendant, of certain property of the plaintiff. The defendant avows the taking and detention of the property, but claims that his act was lawful, and justifies his action under the claim that said property escaped from the possession of the plaintiff, and was trespassing on the property of the defendant; doing him damage in the injury to his crops, etc. That under these circumstances he, the defendant, had a right to impound the horses of the plaintiff,

CHARGE OF COURT.

and hold them until the damages he had sustained had been paid by the plaintiff.

So far as the evidence discloses, no notice in writing was given by the defendant to the plaintiff of the impounding of the horses, and if the proceedings involved in this suit are based upon the statute of this State passed March 2, 1893 (Rev. Code, 482), the defense must necessarily fail, because under that statute, a written notice must be given if cattle are impounded for running at large upon the highway or uninclosed lands. It is admitted that the lands upon which the horses in this case were trespassing at the time they were impounded, were uninclosed lands. But the defendant insists that the statute of March 2, 1893, does not take away the remedy that existed in such cases at common law, and that he is standing in this case upon his rights at common law. It therefore becomes a very important question to determine whether the statute which I have mentioned does cover this particular case, and whether it is exclusive of every other remedy, including that which had previously existed at common law.

In 23 Am. & Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 388, we find this principle stated: "As a rule, affimative words without negative words do not annul the common law, but it is well established that a statute which treats of the whole of any subject matter abrogates the common law on that subject, as a subsequent statute treating of the whole subject matter of a previous statute will be a virtual repeal of the previous statute." We think this is a very clear and comprehensive statement of the rule which we believe to be sound law. It was in fact decided by this Court in the case of Spruance vs. Truax, 9 Houst., 129, and affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals after full argument, that a special statute which provided the remedy for a person who had sustained damages from animals escaping from the premises of their owner and trespassing upon his lands, was the only one under which proceedings could be taken, although it provided for no notice to be given the owner, even though there was a prior statute of a general character covering the

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