- May 7, 2013
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WOW...That is scary..Someone training to become a police officer behaving that way.
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I agree with everything you said, and I also want to avoid starting a Hatfield & McCoy style war with my only neighbor LOL. In my experience, the kind of meat-head idiot who fires at my livestock on my property is NOT likely to understand that the consequences of his actions are his own doing :/ I am also worried about what to do when my husband & I both work on the same day (so far we've been lucky and one or the other of us is usually home). Originally the coop was started behind our shed, about 30 feet from the neighbors house (we weren't going to have a rooster originally), but they got a pair of pit bulls before we finished the coop so we opted to move the coop the the opposite side of the property, about 150 feet from their porch. and half behind my house. Neighbor had to go down into his pasture to get a clear shot at my bird. I might invest in surveillance cameras to avoid any confusion if/when I do need to contact authorities. :/
How loud are roosters? Not very. When I'm in my house, I can't hear my roosters. I can however hear lawnmowers, boom boxes, traffic, barking dogs and train horns.Living in the country and getting upset about hearing a rooster crow is like going to the beach and getting upset about how sandy it is.
MO dog statute.I'm going to have to re-read the law. I live in Missouri and I don't recall anything that says you can track a dog across the state and shoot it where it's found. What I read was that you can kill it if it's on your property and bothering (worrying) livestock. Also keep in mind that just because the law allows you to kill animals that are bothering or worrying your livestock doesn't mean that a civil lawsuit can't be brought against you and if you end up with a dog loving judge, he could decide in favor of the plaintiff (dog owner) on grounds that maybe you didn't do everything in your power to make sure your chickens were secure from danger.
In SC if your chickens are lose but on your property it is the dog owner's responsibility to make sure the dog is kept off of your property. Chicken owner is not responsible for keeping chickens penned for safety.
WOW...That is scary..Someone training to become a police officer behaving that way.
I think this law is vague and wide open for interpretation. By what you're telling me is that if I have chickens killed by the neighbors dog, which I have, then I can hunt the dog down and shoot to kill even if it's on their property or another property owners place just as long as it's not in an enclosure? I think that's what you're telling me so I'll go on from there. Maybe we should check out the laws about discharging firearms into other people's property.Agree as well. Sometimes steering clear of idiots is the best course of action. But there is a limit.
How loud are roosters? Not very. When I'm in my house, I can't hear my roosters. I can however hear lawnmowers, boom boxes, traffic, barking dogs and train horns.
MO dog statute.
http://www.moga.mo.gov/statutes/chapters/chap273.htm
It specifically describes sheep but it also applies to other livestock.
~~273.030. If any person shall discover any dog or dogs in the act of killing, wounding or chasing sheep in any portion of this state, or shall discover any dog or dogs under such circumstances as to satisfactorily show that such dog or dogs has or have been recently engaged in killing or chasing sheep or other domestic animal or animals, such person is authorized to immediately pursue and kill such dog or dogs; provided, however, that such dog or dogs shall not be killed in any enclosure belonging to or being in lawful possession of the owner of such dog or dogs.
I think this law is vague and wide open for interpretation. By what you're telling me is that if I have chickens killed by the neighbors dog, which I have, then I can hunt the dog down and shoot to kill even if it's on their property or another property owners place just as long as it's not in an enclosure? I think that's what you're telling me so I'll go on from there. Maybe we should check out the laws about discharging firearms into other people's property.
Hunting down a dog after an attack has taken place is not allowed. Generally, a farmer may legally kill a dog only on the farmer's own property. An Illinois court ruled that a sheep farmer who followed a dog back to its owner's home (in a residential area, no less) and shot it there an hour after the dog had killed some of his sheep was not protected under the Illinois statute. (People v. Pope, 383 N.E.2d 278 (1978).)
A dog is not, however, necessarily safe as soon as it leaves the farmer's property. In general, a farmer who wants retaliation is allowed to pursue a dog for a "reasonable time." What is a reasonable time under the circumstances is a question that's resolved when the lawsuit gets to court.
I think you may be on to something but it's not cut and dried. The laws will always be open to interpretation and will vary state to state and county to county and city to city.
The sheriff has been notified 3 times about the dogs including the time when they killed the chickens. The neighbor took care of replacing the hens and rooster at the tune of $300 for the 5 birds. My point in this post was that you had better be prepared for a fight if you hunt down a dog and kill it if it's not on your property at the time and if you do, you'd better have proof that the dog was chasing or bothering the livestock. Without dead or injured animals or a witness or photo, that can be very difficult to prove.A police report should have been done as soon as the dog killed the chickens. If you do it after every attack and tell them you saw the dog do it, then you can take owners to court for the money you are out for the chickens. If it continues then the county can get after the neighbor to put up a fence around their property or force them to get rid of the dog. That is how the law works here in NC.
The sheriff has been notified 3 times about the dogs including the time when they killed the chickens. The neighbor took care of replacing the hens and rooster at the tune of $300 for the 5 birds. My point in this post was that you had better be prepared for a fight if you hunt down a dog and kill it if it's not on your property at the time and if you do, you'd better have proof that the dog was chasing or bothering the livestock. Without dead or injured animals or a witness or photo, that can be very difficult to prove.