DCHP-3

fence viewer

DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.

a municipal official whose duty it is to see that fences meet legal specifications as to construction and location.

Although in general use in colonial Canada, the term is now confined to Nova Scotia; it came to Canada from New England.

Quotations

1793
The following persons were chosen to officiate in their respective offices, the ensuing year, and also the regulations of the same. . . . Abraham Mayvee and Peter Rutland, fence viewers. The height of the fence to be 4 feet 8 inches; water fence voted to be fenced.
1846
All freeholders above the officers in full control. twenty-one years of age are entitled to a vote, and choose the undermentioned officers, viz.--one assessor and a collector . . . and from three to eighteen fence-viewers, whose duty it is to regulate fences.
1894
Bad boundary fences were then, as now, a fertile source of misunderstanding between neighbors; I had been warned of this, and desired . . . to avert the necessity for the services of those municipal officers, known as "fence viewers," who are lawful and absolute arbiters in case of dispute.
1955
List of Ward Officers--. . . Cattle Reeves . . . Fence Viewers . . . Sheep Valuers. . . .
1963
. . . in fact one of the municipal offices at one time was that of fence-viewer.