Originally Posted by Clem
Originally Posted by Fl_Cracker
^^^This^^^ I would secure my gun and go get my deer like I do whenever needs be . Never had issues but cant really do chit to you if you don't have your gun . This is an example of when it's better to ask for forgiveness then permission .


This is trespassing. It doesn't matter what you morally believe is right about finding a deer, securing your gun or whatever. It's still legally trespassing and without permission to enter someone's land to search for the deer, it's a violation of the law.

Couch it as "ask forgiveness later" or get ticked off or whatever, but it's still trespassing.



Off topic, just wanted to show Clem how Missouri's law reads.

In Missouri, retrieval of wildlife from private land without permission of the landowner is punishable by a Class B Misdemeanor. 578.525, RSMo. A conviction of a Missouri Class B Misdemeanor may bring a sentence of up to a $500.00 fine and 6 months in the county jail. Furthermore, the Missouri Conservation Commission will revoke all privileges of the individual to hunt, fish, or trap for at least one year from date of conviction.

If a hunter shoots and wounds a deer or other game on property they have permission to hunt and the game runs onto property where the hunter does not have permission to be, the first thing the hunter should do is contact the neighboring landowner.

The hunter does not have “self-help” rights to cross over onto the adjoining property owners land and retrieve the game without asking for the landowner’s permission first. If the hunter contacts the neighboring landowner and that landowner does not give his or her consent, the hunter is not allowed onto the property to retrieve the game. Even though a hunter may be tracking, blood trailing, or retrieving the game, the activity falls under the scope of "hunting" and thus the hunter can be charged with Hunting Without Permission.

If the hunter who shot the game is not allowed to retrieve the game, the property rights in the animal itself actually eschew back to the state. This means not even the property owner on who’s land the game comes to rest has a right of possession to the animal.


It takes a long time to grow an old friend.