Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) was the committee established as a result of Federal Emergency Relief Act. The Federal Emergency Relief Act was one of the first relief operations under the New Deal by president Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The chairman of FERA was handed over to Harry L. Hopkins, a New York a social worker who was one of Roosevelt's most influential advisers. The FERA's main aim was alleviating adult unemployment. In order to achieve this goal, the FERA provided state assistance for the unemployed and their families. About 5 million dollars were granted to the states. Although costly, this administration provided work for over 20 million people.
Animals that are wild by nature are called ferae naturae, and possession is a means of acquiring title to such animals.
If, however, a wild animal is either killed or caught in a trap so that the capture is certain, the individual who traps or mortally wounds it acquires a vested right to possession and title that is not defeatable by another's intervention.
Animals ferae naturae differ from those that are tame or domesticated, or domitae, in which an individual can have an absolute property right.