In legal history, an animal trial is a trial of a non-human animal. These trials may have been conducted by secular or ecclesiastic courts. Records of such trials show that they took place in Europe from the thirteenth to the eighteenth century. In modern times, it is considered in most criminal justice systems that non-human animals lack moral agency and so cannot be held culpable for an act.

Illustration from Chambers Book of Days depicting a sow and her piglets being tried for the murder of a child. The trial allegedly took place in 1457, the mother being found guilty and the piglets acquitted.

The archives on animal cases are spotty. France has preserved significant documentation, but, more generally, extant documentation does not permit a comprehensive analysis of the prevalence and distribution of these cases at different points in time and place.

History of animal trials

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Trial documents, legal treatises and witness accounts shed light on the history of animal trials in Europe. The somewhat patchy nature of this documentation does not allow legal analysts to draw comprehensive conclusions about the legal and cultural importance of these trials. For example, one analyst evokes the "possibility that the efflorescence of these trials in late mediaeval France is entirely an artifact of the record...".[1] That is, we know only of the cases whose documents have survived until modern times (and this collection of extant records includes many French cases), not those cases whose proceedings were never recorded or were lost. Furthermore, some compendia of cases only include those where the animal was found guilty.[1] Despite these weaknesses in the historical record, it is clear that such trials did take place, given the hundreds of cases for which documentation exists.[2][3]

In the thirteenth to the twentieth century, "animal trials were held in many European regions, especially in France, but also in Switzerland, Tyrol, Germany, the Netherlands, the southern Slavonic countries and, on rare occasions, in Italy and Spain."[4] In France, the first written judgments are said to date to the thirteenth century. Although there is some controversy about the date of the first recorded jurisprudence,[5] some authors[2][3] fix the date at 1226, the year in which a pig was burned alive in Fontenay-aux-Roses for having devoured an infant.

These trials were part of a broader set of judicial practices that seem archaic to modern eyes, such as the prosecution of corpses and of inanimate objects.[6] Animals were charged for causing various types of harm to either individual humans (e.g. pigs killing young children) or to entire communities (e.g. pests causing crop damage). Bestiality was another possible charge.[2][3]

Numerous species of animals could face criminal or ecclessiastic charges across many parts of Europe. The animal species involved were almost invariably either domesticated ones (most often pigs, bulls, horses, donkeys, mules and cows, for secular courts) or pests such as rats and weevils for ecclesiastical courts.[2][3] In contrast, "wild beasts, like wolves or bears, were never subject to such legal action… ."[4]

Proceedings and punishments

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The proceedings of animal trials were generally similar to those of humans. Animal defendants appeared before both church and secular courts, and the charges brought against them ranged from murder to criminal damage. Human witnesses were often heard, and in ecclesiastical courts the animals were provided with lawyers (this was not always the case in secular courts, but in some places and time periods, human defendants did not have defense lawyers either). If convicted, it was usual for an animal to be executed or exiled. However, in 1750, a female donkey was acquitted of charges of bestiality due to witness testimony affirming the animal's virtue and good behaviour. Her human co-defendant was sentenced to death.[1]

Secular proceedings and punishments

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Cover of The Criminal Prosecution and Capital Punishment of Animals by Edward Payson Evans

In the Middle Ages, criminal proceedings for animals largely followed those followed for humans. These were formal proceedings carried out by professional lawyers and experts and following established procedural law.[4] When an animal was accused of committing a crime against a human or against his property, the animal was notified and might have been assigned a defense lawyer (however, during certain time periods and in certain locations, even humans may not have had legal representation at trial).[7]

In at least some cases, the owner of the animal being criminally charged could be a co-defendant or complicit in the crime. For example, the Saint Louis Establishments (a Medieval collection of legal documents), the owner of a domestic animal found to be responsible for the murder could be hanged if he admitted to having prior knowledge of the animal's vice. If he swore that he was unaware of the animal's vice, he owed to the courts the 'relief of a dead man' (a fine paid for the death of a person) and, in all cases, the animal was confiscated by the court.[8]

If found guilty of homicide, the animal could be sentenced to death. The carrying out of sentences was solemn and public and was usually performed by professional executioners. Frequently, large crowds gathered to witness the execution. Sometimes the animal was dressed in human attire prior to being killed. A variety of methods were used to put convicted animals to death, including hanging, strangling and burning. Sometimes, instead of burning animals while they were still alive, the judge showed mercy and permitted the animal to be singed, strangled and then burnt.[3] The animal might also be tortured before being executed; for example, a pig that killed a child in the Norman city of Failaise in 1386 and, in so doing, mutilated its face and arms, was subjected to the same mutilations prior to being hung. This scene was later memorialised in a fresco painted in the local church[2][9]

Trials of pests

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Although less frequent than those just described, other animal trials sought to condemn pests for destroying crops or causing other harm to humans. These cases, generally handled by ecclesiastical courts, examined the misdeeds of a wide range of pests, including caterpillars, flies, moles, worms, snails, and leeches.[3] The objective of these trials was to find the pests guilty and to cause them to leave. In doing so, ecclesiastical courts necessarily resorted to different judicial techniques to render decisions on the pests. They requested the intervention of the church to begin with the pertinent metaphysical actions, such as exorcisms and incantations having as their main element the holy water.[3]

Evans discusses the use of several techniques of conjuration[clarification needed] used for the expulsion and extermination of pests. He cites a treatise by Kassianos Bassos, a Byzantine Bithynian who lived in the tenth century, in which he describes, step by step, a recipe to kill field mice, who are asked to leave the fields on pain of be cut into seven pieces.[3] He also mentions how in the 17th century the people of the Lucerne, knowing the pope had the ability to condemn and curse pests without having to undergo legal technicalities, paid a pope to conjure up a hexing document.[3]

Specific cases

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France – homicidal pigs

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Execution of a pig from the1906 book, The Criminal Prosecution and Punishment of Animals

Pigs were often the _target of criminal cases because they lived amongst humans and could be dangerous, especially for young children. An inventory of such cases between from the thirteenth to the sixteenth century finds 15 cases where pigs were executed for killing children. Generally, the condemned pigs were hung and sometimes tortured prior to execution. For example, in 1492, a piglet was dragged and then hung by the hind legs for murdering a child in Abbeville.[2]

In some cases, not only was the direct author of the crime found guilty, but "accomplices" might be identified. For example, in the village of Saint-Marcel-le-Jeussey in 1379, two herds of pigs were said to have rioted and incited an infanticide committed by other pigs. Although the pigs found guilty of homicide were sentenced to death, the two herds of complicit pigs were pardoned, thanks to the intervention of the Duke of Burgundy.[3]

France – virtuous donkey found not guilty

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Jacques Ferron was a Frenchman who was tried and hanged in 1750 for copulation with a jenny (female donkey).[3][10] The trial took place in the commune of Vanves and Ferron was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.[11] In cases such as these it was usual that the animal would also be sentenced to death,[12] but in this case the she-ass was acquitted. The court decided that the animal was a victim and had not participated of her own free will. A document, dated 19 September 1750, was submitted to the court on behalf of the she-ass that attested to the virtuous nature of the animal. Signed by the parish priest and other principal residents of the commune it proclaimed that "they were willing to bear witness that she is in word and deed and in all her habits of life a most honest creature."[3]

France – rats and woodworms

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A notable French jurist, Bartholomé Chassenée (1480-1542), successfully defended the rats of Autun through various largely procedural arguments. He won an extension for the rats (who had failed to honour a summons and appear in ecclesiastical court) by arguing that they did so because they feared for their lives. He used similar arguments in defense of woodworms in Mamirolle.[4]

Switzerland – unnatural roosters

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According to Johannis Gross in Kurze Basler Chronik (1624), a rooster was put on trial in 1474 in the city of Basel for "the heinous and unnatural crime of laying an egg", which the townspeople feared was spawned by Satan and contained a cockatrice, a malignant, winged reptile.[13] The rooster was burnt, along with its egg, in front of a large crowd in a place called Kohlenberger.[2] Another such case took place elsewhere in Switzerland in 1730. The facts underpinning these cases can occur when chickens develop male plumage as a result of tumours or other diseases of the ovaries.[13]

Rationale and criticism

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A number of explanations have been advanced as to why these practices, so strange to modern eyes, were adopted. One of these is that they served as a source of deterrence. According to one analyst, the "principal aim of justice is example ... If we see ... a pig hanged and strangled for having eaten a child (a punishment which is familiar to us), it is to induce fathers & mothers, nursemaids, servants not to leave their children all alone, or to lock up their animals well so that they cannot injure or harm (the children)." quoted in [14]. Another possibility is that such spectacles served as a form of public entertainment in an era where opportunities for such entertainment may have been limited. Finally, given that the secular law of the time gained its legitimacy from and was closely linked to religious belief, the elaborate spectacles of animal executions could also have served as communal mechanisms for restoring faith in the broader divine and public order; that is, the spectacle provided a means for the public to see that both divine and secular "justice is done."[14]

While animal trials and executions presumably made sense to many Medieval and early modern communities, the idea nevertheless attracted criticism of scholars and legal practitioners over many centuries. A compendium of Roman law, the Digest, notes that animals are ‘senseless’ and therefore cannot commit 'infringements'. In a similar vein, Thomas Aquinas asserts in Summa Theologiae that animals are not subjects of law because they cannot understand words or think rationally. Philippe de Rémi, a French jurist and royal official who died in 1296, states in 1283 that criminal acts require intent and that, therefore, animals cannot commit them and should not be punished for them because they lack knowledge of good and evil. Thus, for centuries, some legal analysts expressed serious misgivings about the metaphysical basis of these trials.[4]

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  • Evans' work on animal trials and executions has been used in jurisprudence about animal abuse that is currently debated in the Constitutional Court of Colombia, an institution that has cited this compilation of animal trials to debate animals' status subjects of law.[3][15]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Srivastava, Anila (2007). ""Mean, dangerous, and uncontrollable beasts": Mediaeval Animal Trials". Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal. 40 (1): 127–143. ISSN 0027-1276. JSTOR 44030162.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Agnel, Émile (2007-10-27). Curiosités judiciaires et historiques du moyen âge. Procès contre les animaux (in French).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Evans, Edward (1906). "The criminal prosecution and capital punishment of animals". The Project Gutenberg EBook.
  4. ^ a b c d e Dinzelbacher, Peter (2002). "Animal Trials: A Multidisciplinary Approach". The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 32 (3): 405–421. ISSN 0022-1953. JSTOR 3656215.
  5. ^ Frank, Colin (2021). "The pig that was not convicted of homicide, or: The first animal trial that was none". Global Journal of Animal Law. 9.
  6. ^ Hyde, Walter Woodburn (1916). "The Prosecution and Punishment of Animals and Lifeless Things in the Middle Ages and Modern Times". University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register. 64 (7): 696–730. doi:10.2307/3313677. ISSN 0749-9833. JSTOR 3313677.
  7. ^ Woodburn Hyde, Walter (May 1916). "The Prosecution and Punishment of Animals and Lifeless Things in the Middle Ages and Modern Times". University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register. 64 (7): 696–730. doi:10.2307/3313677. JSTOR 3313677.
  8. ^ Adhémar Esmein Esmein Adhémar, Collection XIX, 2 août 2016, 628 p. ISBN 978-2-346-09027-3
  9. ^ Carson, Hampton L. (1917). "The Trial of Animals and Insects. A Little Known Chapter of Mediæval Jurisprudence". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 56 (5): 410–415. ISSN 0003-049X.
  10. ^ Potts, Malcolm; Short, Roger Valentine (1999). Ever since Adam and Eve: the evolution of human sexuality. Cambridge University Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-521-64404-4.
  11. ^ Ford, Beach, C.S, F.A. Patterns of Sexual Behaviour. Taylor & Francis. p. 153.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Costlow, Nelson, Jane, Amy (2010). Other Animals: Beyond the Human in Russian Culture and History. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-8229-6063-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ a b E. V., Walter (1985). "Nature on Trial: The Case of the Rooster That Laid an Egg". Comparative Civilizations Review. 10 (10). ISSN 0733-4540. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  14. ^ a b Friedland, Paul (2003). "Beyond Deterrence: Cadavers, Effigies, Animals and the Logic of Executions in Premodern France". Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques. 29 (2): 295–317. ISSN 0315-7997. JSTOR 41299274.
  15. ^ Constitutional Court of Colombia, [C.C.] (January 23, 2020). "Sentence SU016/20". Constitutional Court of Colombia, rapporteurship.

References

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