The plaintiff drove his team down State Street in Grinnell, turning west on Fifth Avenue, and, after going a short distance, a dog, as is alleged, ran under the carriage and nipped the hind leg of one of the horses. It kicked over the tongue, striking the other horse, and the team ran away. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding that the dog bit the horse is challenged, but an examination of the record has convinced us that the issue was for the jury. So, too, the amount allowed as damages has such support in the evidence as to preclude interference by this court.
The court, however, instructed “that if the defendant Crosby had the dog in his possession, and he had kept the dog on his premises, and kept him as owners usually do keep their dogs and that he was following him on the public streets, and he claimed to own the dog, then he is owner of the dog in law and in so far as this action is concerned.”
But section 2340 of the Code provides that: “It
Because of the error in the instruction, the judgment is reversed.