30 Iowa 459 | Iowa | 1870
On the trial it appeared that the plaintiff was the owner of the colt, worth $100, which was foaled about the 15th of May, 1866; that it was a horse colt, and had never been altered, and was found on the afternoon of Monday, November 12, 1867, lying in the ditch of the defendants’ road, near West Liberty, with three of its legs broken, valueless, and had to be killed; the defendants’ road was fenced on both sides; but, near where the colt was found, there were bars made for the convenience of land owners in that vicinity in hauling
In this case there can be no doubt that the colt was injured by the engine and cars of the defendant; but there is no proof of any negligence by defendant’s employees respecting the injury. There is, perhaps, no reasonable doubt that the colt entered the roadway through the bars; but the proof shows that the defendant was blameless for the bars being down, since it is shown that another so left them; and it does not appear when they were left down. The testimony shows that the colt was injured either Sat
Reversed.