Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HB1819 House Committee Report / Analysis

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    BILL ANALYSIS             H.B. 1819     By: Kacal     Agriculture & Livestock     Committee Report (Unamended)             BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE    Under current law, a person whose fence is insufficient to keep out a trespassing head of cattle or a horse, mule, jack, or jennet is liable for damages if the person maims, wounds, or kills such an animal. Interested parties assert that sheep and goats have been injured or killed by a neighboring landowner and that such livestock should also be provided the same protection. H.B. 1819 seeks to address this issue by establishing provisions relating to liability for injuring a trespassing sheep or goat.        RULEMAKING AUTHORITY    It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution.       ANALYSIS    H.B. 1819 amends the Agriculture Code to make a person whose fence is insufficient under statutory provisions governing a local option to prevent certain animals from running at large and who maims, wounds, or kills a trespassing sheep or goat, or procures the maiming, wounding, or killing of such an animal, by any means, including a gun or a dog, liable to the owner of the animal for damages. The bill specifies that such liability does not authorize a person to maim, wound, or kill any sheep or goat of another person.       EFFECTIVE DATE    September 1, 2013.        

BILL ANALYSIS

# BILL ANALYSIS

 

 

 

H.B. 1819
By: Kacal
Agriculture & Livestock
Committee Report (Unamended)

H.B. 1819

By: Kacal

Agriculture & Livestock

Committee Report (Unamended)

 

 

 

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE    Under current law, a person whose fence is insufficient to keep out a trespassing head of cattle or a horse, mule, jack, or jennet is liable for damages if the person maims, wounds, or kills such an animal. Interested parties assert that sheep and goats have been injured or killed by a neighboring landowner and that such livestock should also be provided the same protection. H.B. 1819 seeks to address this issue by establishing provisions relating to liability for injuring a trespassing sheep or goat.
RULEMAKING AUTHORITY    It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution.
ANALYSIS    H.B. 1819 amends the Agriculture Code to make a person whose fence is insufficient under statutory provisions governing a local option to prevent certain animals from running at large and who maims, wounds, or kills a trespassing sheep or goat, or procures the maiming, wounding, or killing of such an animal, by any means, including a gun or a dog, liable to the owner of the animal for damages. The bill specifies that such liability does not authorize a person to maim, wound, or kill any sheep or goat of another person.
EFFECTIVE DATE    September 1, 2013.

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

 

Under current law, a person whose fence is insufficient to keep out a trespassing head of cattle or a horse, mule, jack, or jennet is liable for damages if the person maims, wounds, or kills such an animal. Interested parties assert that sheep and goats have been injured or killed by a neighboring landowner and that such livestock should also be provided the same protection. H.B. 1819 seeks to address this issue by establishing provisions relating to liability for injuring a trespassing sheep or goat. 

 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY 

 

It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution.

 

ANALYSIS 

 

H.B. 1819 amends the Agriculture Code to make a person whose fence is insufficient under statutory provisions governing a local option to prevent certain animals from running at large and who maims, wounds, or kills a trespassing sheep or goat, or procures the maiming, wounding, or killing of such an animal, by any means, including a gun or a dog, liable to the owner of the animal for damages. The bill specifies that such liability does not authorize a person to maim, wound, or kill any sheep or goat of another person.

 

EFFECTIVE DATE 

 

September 1, 2013.