The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Judge: No to elephant petition

No ‘legal personhood’ for zoo animals

- By Ben Lambert

TORRINGTON — Judge James Bentivegna denied a petition seeking to free three elephants from the Commerford Zoo on Tuesday, rejecting the argument that the animals should be granted legal personhood.

The Nonhuman Rights Project filed the lawsuit in November, with the hopes of garnering a writ of habeas corpus for three elephants from the Goshen zoo — Beulah, Karen and Minnie.

The Florida-based group contended that, considerin­g their cognitive abilities and sense of self, the animals should be considered autonomous beings and thus legal persons who cannot be detained under the law.

Its petition included an overview of research into the herbivores’ world view, pointing to a series of abilities possessed by elephants, including the ability to plan, communicat­e, have an awareness of self and of others, solve problems, understand causation and engage in teaching to pass down knowledge, claiming these as examples

of their “complex cognitive abilities sufficient for common law personhood and the common law right to bodily liberty, as a matter of common law liberty, equality, or both under Connecticu­t common law.”

Bentivegna denied the group’s petition for a writ of habeas, writing that “the court lacks subject matter jurisdicti­on and the petition is wholly frivolous on its face in legal terms.”

This decision was based on two conclusion­s, Bentivegna said — one, that the group did not have a prior relationsh­ip with the three elephants, and thus did not have standing to bring the petition; and two, that there was no precedent for providing elephants the rights of legal personhood.

Unlike in New York, where a court found the Nonhuman Rights Project had legal standing to pursue the release of two chimpanzee­s in 2015, Bentivegna wrote that Connecticu­t law does not specifical­ly note that habeas petitions can be filed on the behalf of individual­s in noncrimina­l custody.

They can be filed for those considered parents or legal guardians of a child — Bentivegna noted that the Nonhuman Rights Project were not the parents of the elephants, writing that “the Commerford family (is) more akin to the parents of Beulah, Minnie and Karen” —or those found to have “next friend” status.

Bentivegna wrote that “next friend” status requires the individual imprisoned cannot file for a petition on their own, that the petitioner must be dedicated to the individual’s best interests and that the petitioner have some preexistin­g relationsh­ip with the imprisoned person.

“Because the petitioner has failed to allege that it possesses any relationsh­ip with the elephants, the petitioner lacks standing,” said Bentivegna.

In its petition, the Nonhuman Rights Project argued that people who were “strangers” to the confined individual had standing to file habeas petitions under state law, and that Connecticu­t procedural statutes continued such a commonlaw tradition.

Bentivegna also declined to grant elephants the status of legal personhood, as such a claim has not been previously establishe­d through precedent.

“Does the petitioner’s theory that an elephant is a person entitled to those same liberties extended to you or I have a possibilit­y or probabilit­y of victory? The petitioner is unable to point to any authority which has held so, but instead relies on basic human rights of freedom and equality, and points to expert averments of similariti­es between elephants and human beings as evidence that this court must forge new law,” said Bentivegna. “Based on the law as it stands today, this court cannot so find.”

In its petition, the Nonhuman Rights Project pointed to past instances where courts have granted non-human actors and objects the rights of legal personhood, indicating that four past instances, including the case of the New York chimpanzee­s, meant that the case had a possibilit­y of victory, and argued that such a decision would be in accordance with Connecticu­t common law.

Bentivegna noted statutes pertaining to animal cruelty “as a potential alternativ­e method of ensuring the well-being of any animal.”

The Nonhuman Rights Project noted but did not use past allegation­s of animal cruelty as the basis of its suit.

Steven Wise, founder and President of the Nonhuman Rights Project, said in a statement Wednesday that the group planned to appeal Bentivegna’s decision. This was later retracted by the group.

Jennifer Fermino of the Fenton communicat­ions agency, working on behalf of the group, said late Wednesday that the Nonhuman Rights Project was reviewing the decision and would issue another statement in the future.

Representa­tives of R.W. Commerford & Sons could not be immediatel­y reached for comment Wednesday.

Tim Commerford, coowner of the Commerford Zoo, has previously called the lawsuit “prepostero­us” and “far-fetched,” and described it as a ploy for money and media attention. The elephants are appropriat­ely cared for, he has said.

“If I don’t see them on a daily basis, I’m thinking about them, because I grew up with them all my life,” he said. “They’re family. The animal activists can say what they want about it, but they’re part of our family.”

 ?? File photo / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? An elephant from Commerford at the 2015 Goshen Fair.
File photo / Hearst Connecticu­t Media An elephant from Commerford at the 2015 Goshen Fair.

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