Page:Halsbury Laws of England v1 1907.pdf/589

This page needs to be proofread.

— —

.

Part

II.

Property in Animals.

367

and kept

in inclosed ground are the subject of property, pass to the executors (i/) and are liable to be taken in distress (-e). ,

800. The owner

Sect,

i.

Civil Rights.

land has a qualified property ratione im-

(2) Qualified

young of animals fercE natiirce born on the land until they can fly or run away (a), as where hawks, herons, or rabbits make their nests or burrows on the land and have young and an action of trespass (b) will lie for taking young animals so

property ratione impo-

of

potentice et loci in the

tentice et loci.

born

(c).

801. The owner of land, who has retained the exclusive right ; to (3) Qualified hunt, take and kill animals ferce naturae on his own land, has a property ratione soli qualified property ratione soli in them for the time being while they and ratione are there {d) But if such an owner grants to another the right to Ijrivilegii. hunt, take and kill SLmmals ferce natures on his land, the grantee has a qualified property ratione privilegii (e), as in the case of a free warren on another man's soil (/), or a licence or grant of shooting or sporting rights (g). Such a grant is an incorporeal hereditament and an interest in realty, and amounts to a licence of a profit d prendre which can only be validly granted or demised by deed (/i). .

Sub-Sect.

3.

Projperty in

Wild Animals when Killed.

802. Although there

is only a qualified property in animals Right while they are alive, yet if they are killed, or die, there ^^iV IS an absolute property in the dead animal, which vests in the owner or occupier of the land, or the grantee or licensee of shooting or sporting rights as the case may be the grantee or licensee of sporting rights has an absolute property in game killed, and may maintain an action against anyone infringing his rights therein {i)

ferce naturce

of pro-

^^^^

.

803. The absolute property which the owner or occupier of land, wild animals, or the grantee of the privilege, has in dead animals fercE naturm is Y^^^^ ^^^P^^^^^* not confined to animals killed by him or his agents, and if the animals are killed by a trespasser, the trespasser has no property in them {k) Thus in a case of trespass for breaking the plaintiff's close and Poachers, hunting, killing, taking, and carrying away a hundred rabbits there found, it was moved in arrest of judgment that conies were fercE (y)

2 J.

Morgan

& H.

(2)

(a)

(6) (c)

v.

Earl of Ahergavenny (1849), 8 0. B. 768

Ford

v.

Tynte (1861),

150.

Davies v. Powell (1737), Willes, 46. Case of Siuans (1592), 7 Co. Eep. 17 b. Ihid. and Fitzherbert, Nat. Brev. 86 L, 89 K. Blades v. Biggs (1865), 11 H. L. Gas. 621; per Lord Westbitry, L.C, at

p. 631. (d) Ibid.

and per Powell, J., in Kehle v. Hickringill (e) Blades v. Higgs, supra; (1706), 11 Mod. Eep. 74, 75. (/) Ihid. {g) For forms of such, licences and grants, see Encyclopaedia of Forms, Vol.

YIL, pp. 599—632. Ewart Y. Graham (1859),

7 H. L. Cas. 331. Fitzgerald v. Firbank, [1897] 2 Ch. 96; compare Lowe v. Adams, [1901] 2 Ch. 598. (k) Sutton V. Moody (1697), 1 Ld. Eaym. 250 ; and see per Westbury, L.C, in Blades v. Higgs, supra. {Ji)

(t)