Codifying Animal Welfare Standards: Foundations for Better Animal Protection or Merely a Facade?
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Author(s)
White, Steven
Dale, Arnja
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2013
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While modern animal welfare legislation can extend over hundreds of complex provisions, the first animal protection laws, enacted in the United Kingdom in the early 19th century, were of a very simple nature. For the most part, they focused entirely on the prohibition of ‘cruelty’, leaving the thorny determination of what actually constituted ‘cruel’ conduct entirely to the courts. An early example of court-defined ‘cruelty’ is provided by the leading English case of Ford v Wiley.1 In this case, it was alleged the defendant had breached the law which said (relevantly) it was an offence ‘if any person shall … cruelly beat, ...
View more >While modern animal welfare legislation can extend over hundreds of complex provisions, the first animal protection laws, enacted in the United Kingdom in the early 19th century, were of a very simple nature. For the most part, they focused entirely on the prohibition of ‘cruelty’, leaving the thorny determination of what actually constituted ‘cruel’ conduct entirely to the courts. An early example of court-defined ‘cruelty’ is provided by the leading English case of Ford v Wiley.1 In this case, it was alleged the defendant had breached the law which said (relevantly) it was an offence ‘if any person shall … cruelly beat, ill-treat, over-drive, abuse, or torture, or cause or pro cure to be cruelly beaten, ill-treated, over-driven, abused or tortured any animal’. The word ‘cruelly’ – the critical modifier in this instance – was not qualified or defined in the legislation itself. As a consequence, the court interpreted the term to give it a significant qualification, which was that cruelty is not unlawful if it is ‘reasonably necessary’.2 Lord Coleridge held that such necessity includes consideration of whether the act was under taken for an ‘adequate and reasonable object’.3 Judge Hawkins expanded on what was reasonable or necessary, giving examples of accepted practices such as the castration of male animals ‘intended for use or for food’. Both members of the bench said that the (allowable) cruelty should be proportional to the object.4
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View more >While modern animal welfare legislation can extend over hundreds of complex provisions, the first animal protection laws, enacted in the United Kingdom in the early 19th century, were of a very simple nature. For the most part, they focused entirely on the prohibition of ‘cruelty’, leaving the thorny determination of what actually constituted ‘cruel’ conduct entirely to the courts. An early example of court-defined ‘cruelty’ is provided by the leading English case of Ford v Wiley.1 In this case, it was alleged the defendant had breached the law which said (relevantly) it was an offence ‘if any person shall … cruelly beat, ill-treat, over-drive, abuse, or torture, or cause or pro cure to be cruelly beaten, ill-treated, over-driven, abused or tortured any animal’. The word ‘cruelly’ – the critical modifier in this instance – was not qualified or defined in the legislation itself. As a consequence, the court interpreted the term to give it a significant qualification, which was that cruelty is not unlawful if it is ‘reasonably necessary’.2 Lord Coleridge held that such necessity includes consideration of whether the act was under taken for an ‘adequate and reasonable object’.3 Judge Hawkins expanded on what was reasonable or necessary, giving examples of accepted practices such as the castration of male animals ‘intended for use or for food’. Both members of the bench said that the (allowable) cruelty should be proportional to the object.4
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Book Title
Animal Law in Australasia
Copyright Statement
© 2013 Federation Press. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. It is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the publisher’s website for further information.
Subject
Law not elsewhere classified