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<blockquote data-quote="justin_h635" data-source="post: 2614851" data-attributes="member: 24704"><p>I am shocked by what I read here and am amazed that hunters think their stuff comes first. How people do not realize that cattle owners rights always come first (and should) unless proven history of negilence . Now, should cattle owner possibly offer something up in damages for goodwill-yes, but is he entitled to-NO. Cattle have been breaching fences , breeding heifers, eating crops for 100's of years and nothing will change that. Those of us with ties to the land (hunting and non-hunting alike) need to realize this and chalk it up to risk. </p><p></p><p>Do you realize that if your new SUV that is worth as much as some people's houses hits one of those cows in the road and totals it, that the cows owner will not pay a cent? These laws are there for a reason.</p><p></p><p>We have had this happen several times over the course of years and yes it sucks, but you go on. It's part of rural life. Now if this is the 10th time in the last year, different story.</p><p></p><p>Talk of shooting cows, lawyers, etc. just sickens me. Get along, and then when the P&Y you shoot hops the fence onto your neighbor (who owned the cows), he lets you go retrieve it, or just show no grace, and watch him smile as he discourages entry.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="justin_h635, post: 2614851, member: 24704"] I am shocked by what I read here and am amazed that hunters think their stuff comes first. How people do not realize that cattle owners rights always come first (and should) unless proven history of negilence . Now, should cattle owner possibly offer something up in damages for goodwill-yes, but is he entitled to-NO. Cattle have been breaching fences , breeding heifers, eating crops for 100's of years and nothing will change that. Those of us with ties to the land (hunting and non-hunting alike) need to realize this and chalk it up to risk. Do you realize that if your new SUV that is worth as much as some people's houses hits one of those cows in the road and totals it, that the cows owner will not pay a cent? These laws are there for a reason. We have had this happen several times over the course of years and yes it sucks, but you go on. It's part of rural life. Now if this is the 10th time in the last year, different story. Talk of shooting cows, lawyers, etc. just sickens me. Get along, and then when the P&Y you shoot hops the fence onto your neighbor (who owned the cows), he lets you go retrieve it, or just show no grace, and watch him smile as he discourages entry. [/QUOTE]
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