64 Mo. 529 | Mo. | 1877
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
This was an action to recover the value of a horse let by the plaintiff to the defendant and alleged to have been killed by being overdriven by the defendant.
There was evidence to support the finding of the court, both as to the value of the horse and the cause of its death.
The only error assigned here worthy, of notice, relates to the action of .the court in reference to a certain receipt.
It appears from the record that after the killing of the horse in question,the plaintiff, with knowledge thereof, presented to the defendant for payment an account containing among other items, one for the hire of the horse killed, which account the defendant paid and took from the plaintiff a receipt for the amount thereof, expressed to be in full of all demands. The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that this receipt was a bar to a recovery by the plaintiff, and the court refused so to instruct.
There was no error in this action of the court. The receipt was open to explanation (Grumley vs. Webb, 44 Mo. 444), and it is evident from the items of the account presented and paid that the subject matter of this suit was not embraced in the settlement made. There was no reference whatever in the account to the claim for damages. It might very properly have been left to the-jury to determine what was included in the settlement, but it was certainly improper to declare as a matter of law that the receipt itself would preclude a recovery, regardless of the intention of the parties and the nature of the transaction. The fact that the plaintiff charged the defendant with the hire of the horse killed, was not a waiver of his claim for damages for the killing of the horse, nor was the payment of such hire, of itself, a settlement of the claim for damages.
A bailee may be chargeable both witli the hire of the thing bailed and its value, if lost by his negligence. (Story Bail. § 417.) The judgment will be affirmed.