Animal Law Review
First Page
147
Abstract
In this comment, the author explores the development of open range laws in Oregon and other western states and argues such laws should be abolished or drastically amended. Common law requires ranchers to fence livestock in or face liability for damages caused by strays. Hvever, historical customs and practices of Western states were shaped by vast open lands and sparce populations, leading to open range customs which required a landowner to fence "out" livestock to protect their property. This comment focuses on the case of Dr. Patrick Shipsey, an Oregon landowner convicted of shooting cattle that wandered onto his land. Through this discussion, the viability of open range statutes is discussed and the ongoing debate exposed. Policy alternatives are proposed that reflect modern demographic changes and a re-balancing of the economic and environmental burdens of ranching practices.
Recommended Citation
Coby Dolan,
Examining the Viability of Another Lord of Yesterday: Open Range Laws and Livestock Dominnance in the Modern West,
5
Animal L. Rev.
147
(1999).
Available at:
https://lawcommons.lclark.edu/alr/vol5/iss1/10