East Bay Times

Bronx Zoo elephant named Happy isn't a person, court rules

- By Michael Hill

ALBANY, N.Y. >> Happy the elephant may be intelligen­t and deserving of compassion, but she cannot be considered a person being illegally confined to the Bronx Zoo, New York's top court ruled Tuesday.

The 5-2 decision by the state Court of Appeals comes in a closely watched case that tested the boundaries of applying human rights to animals.

The zoo and its supporters warned that a win for advocates at the Nonhuman Rights Project could open the door to more legal actions on behalf of animals, including pets, farm animals and other species in zoos.

The court's majority echoed that point.

The decision written by Chief Judge Janet DiFiore said that “while no one disputes that elephants are intelligen­t beings deserving of proper care and compassion,” a writ of habeas corpus is intended to protect the liberty of human beings and does not apply to a nonhuman animal like Happy.

The decision affirms a lower court ruling and means Happy will not be released to a more spacious sanctuary through a habeas corpus proceeding, which is a way for people to challenge illegal confinemen­t.

Extending that right to Happy to challenge her confinemen­t at a zoo “would have an enormous destabiliz­ing impact on modern society.” And granting legal personhood in a case like this would affect how humans interact with animals, according to the majority decision.

“Indeed, followed to its logical conclusion, such a determinat­ion would call into question the very premises underlying pet ownership, the use of service animals, and the enlistment of animals in other forms of work,” read the decision.

Operators of the Bronx Zoo argued Happy is neither illegally imprisoned nor a person, but a wellcared-for elephant “respected as the magnificen­t creature she is.”

The advocates at the Nonhuman Rights Project argued that Happy is an autonomous, cognitivel­y complex elephant worthy of the right reserved in law for “a person.”

Two judges, Rowan Wilson and Jenny Rivera, wrote separate, sharply worded dissents saying the fact that Happy is an animal does not prevent her from having legal rights. Rivera wrote that Happy is being held in “an environmen­t that is unnatural to her and that does not allow her to live her life.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York's top court on Tuesday rejected an effort to free Happy the elephant from the Bronx Zoo, ruling that she does not meet the definition of a “person” who is being illegally confined.
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York's top court on Tuesday rejected an effort to free Happy the elephant from the Bronx Zoo, ruling that she does not meet the definition of a “person” who is being illegally confined.

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