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ANIMAL

Any animate being which is endowed with the power of voluntary motion. In the language of the law the term includes all living creatures not human. Domitae are those which have been tamed by man; domestic. Fierce natures are those which still retain their wild nature. Mansuetce natures are those gentle or tame by nature, such as sheep and cows. Animals of a base nature. Animals in which a right of property may be acquired by reclaiming them from wildness, but which, at common law, by reason of their base nature, are not regarded as possible subjects of a larceny. 3 Inst. 109; 1 Hale, P. C. 511, 512. Animalia fera, si facta sint mansueta et ex consuetudine emit et redeunt, volant et revolant, ut cervi, cygni, etc., eo usque nostra sunt, et ita intelliguntur qnamdin habuerunt animum revertendi. Wild animals, if they be made tame, and are accust6med to go out and return, fly away and fly back, as stags, swans, etc., are considered to belong to us so long as they have the intention of returning to us. 7 Coke, 16.

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