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Lawsuit Testing Personhood Of Chimps Gets Its Day At An Appeals Court

A four-month-old baby Chimpanzee is seen at the National Zoo in Kuala Lumpur in February 2013.
Mohd Rasfan AFP/Getty Images
A four-month-old baby Chimpanzee is seen at the National Zoo in Kuala Lumpur in February 2013.

A novel legal case exploring the personhood of chimps got its day at an appellate level court today.

If you remember, we told you about how the Nonhuman Rights Project is asking a court to send Tommy, a chimpanzee living in a cage at a trailer dealer in Gloversville, N.Y., to a sanctuary.

The argument has been that scientists have found that a chimp is cognitively similar to humans, therefore deserves some of the same rights. In this case, the Nonhuman Rights Project is asking the court for a writ of habeas corpus, which compels a person's captor to explain why they have a right to hold a person captive.

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The lower court that heard this case first, threw it out.

The judge in the case said he agreed with their arguments, but did not agree that New York's habeas corpus law applied to a chimp.

The New York Supreme Court Appellate Division, Third Department, which heard arguments today, has signaled it is taking this case seriously.

Earlier this year, it issued a preliminary injunction preventing Tommy from being moved outside the state.

It's unclear when this court will issue its decision, but these kind of changes in the interpretation of law are usually handed down by higher courts.

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