69 Ind. App. 652 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1919
This was an action begun in tbe superior court of Madison county by tbe appellee against
The complaint is in one paragraph, to which appellant demurred with memorandum, which demurrer was overruled, to which ruling the appellant excepted. The venue of the cause was changed to the circuit court of Tipton county, in which last-named court there was a trial by jury with a verdict for the appellee upon which judgment was rendered. The appellant filed its motion for a new trial, which was overruled, to which ruling appellant excepted and how brings the case on appeal to this court.
The errors relied upon for reversal are: (1) The superior court of Madison county erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to appellee’s complaint. (2j The Tipton Circuit Court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The complaint avers in substance that on September 1, 1915, appellee was engaged in general livery business in the city of Anderson; that at said time he had nineteen “boarders,” or horses, which he was feeding by the month, at a profitable charge therefor, and a great number of transient, horses and horses for livery hire; that the appellant was engaged in the general express business, and for the purpose of delivering its packages in the said city of Anderson it kept four horses which it hired the appellee to board and care for in his livery barn; that on said day, and when the appellee was absent from his said livery
. The demurrer to this complaint was for want of facts to constitute a cause of action, with memorandum- to the effect that there was no allegation that the appellant knew of the condition of the horse which it brought to the appellee’s stable, but that such allegation was pleaded in the disjunctive; that he knew, or could have known by the exercise of reasonable care, and that the same was not pleaded as a distinct fact.
The cause is reversed, with instructions to grant a new trial.