2 Keyes 169 | NY | 1865
Bo question is made but that the plaintiff was injured by the discharge of a musket, loaded with a ball cartridge, by one of the men in the ranks of the regiment; and the command to fire was given by the defendant, personally, to all -the men; and the discharge was pursuant to and in obedience of that direction. These facts constitute the defendant, prima facie, a trespasser to the same extent as though the musket was fired by his own hand. The case does not arise out of negligence, for the injury was direct and immediate, and not consequential. On the other hand, no question can arise but that the assemblage of the men for drill and military exercise was perfectly legal; nor, but that there was an utter absence of any intent to injure the plaintiff or any other human being. The circumstance that one of the guns was loaded with a ball, was, as far as the defendant was concerned, purely accidental. In a moral point of view, and upon the amount of damages to be recovered, it was a great alleviation that the defendant had taken all the usual precautions, and all which were deemed necessary to guard against such an accident. The fact, however, remains, that the plaintiff was shot by the discharge of a loaded gun, and that its discharge was ordered by the defendant. If it had occurred in the discharge of any public duty, which belonged to the defendant to perform, and which he had no other means of performing, the question would have arisen which the judge put to the jury, whether all the precautions had been taken which the circumstances of the case required. For instance, if the defendant and his regiment had been called upon by the civil authority to quell a riot, and an innocent person had been shot, the question would have been, whether, under all the circumstances, all the precautions to prevent injury to innocent third persons which the case admitted of, had been taken. But the defendant was not required by any public duty to cause his men to discharge their firearms at all while people were within musket range. The manner in ,h he was to drill and instruct them depended essential! pon his judgment and discretion. He could have direct he firing to take
I am of opinion, therefore, that the judge might properly have instructed the jury, that the evidence that the defendant had commanded the firing, and that one of the men fired a gun charged with a ball, by the discharge of which the plaintiff was wounded, was sufficient to sustain the action, whatever precautions the defendant and his subordinate oifi_cers had taken to provide «against such an accident.
I am, moreover, of opinion that the judgment can be sustained upon the theory adopted by the judge. He put the case on the ground of want of due care and proper precaution ; and charged, in effect, that there could be no recovery unless the defendant had been guilty of negligence.
The defendant’s exception to this instruction is based upon the assumption that the facts, which were clearly proved and were not contradicted, conclusively rebutted the imputation of negligence. These facts were certainly very strong. The defendant, in the nature of the case, was obliged to act by
I do not think any fault is justly imputable to the plaintiff in being where she was. There was no evidence that she
We have nothing to do with the amount of the verdict; but I cannot refrain from expressing my approval of its ■moderation. A very large amount was claimed in the complaint, which may well have justified the defendant in contesting, and we doubt not but that the appeal was brought with a view of having an interesting point of law settled by the court of final appeal.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. Note.—The court did not pass upon the first branch of the case, discussed by the chief judge, as to the question of the general liability of the commanding officer.—Reporter.