86 S.E. 78 | N.C. | 1915
From a judgment of nonsuit, plaintiff appeals. The complaint alleges that the defendant wrongfully took from the stables of the plaintiff a bay mule, the property of the plaintiff, without his knowledge or consent, and drove him a distance unknown to the plaintiff, and so cruelly mistreated and abused said mule *40 that he died, and this action is to recover the sum of $200, alleged to be the value of the mule.
At the trial the evidence for the plaintiff was that the defendant (2) who was in the employment of the plaintiff as an occasional laborer, took the mule in question from the plaintiff's stables at night, and drove her off without his knowledge or consent, and that while in his possession the mule died; that the mule was worth $200; and he asks damages in that amount. There was evidence that the defendant was cruel to teams, but no direct evidence that the death of the mule had been caused by overdriving or bad treatment, and doubtless on that ground the court directed a nonsuit. In this there was error.
In Bethea v. McLennon,
The defendant in this case was not a bailee, and this was a tortious conversion under circumstances which made the defendant indictable, if the evidence is true; and it must be taken as true upon a nonsuit. Revisal, sec. 3509; S. v. Darden,
In Taylor v. Welsh,
The defendant was in possession of the animal wrongfully, even criminally, if this evidence is to be believed. The animal died while in his possession. He has failed to restore it to the owner in good condition, or show any excuse, and is liable for its value. This case differs entirely from Sawyer v. Wilkinson,
In Doolittle v. Shaw,
The judgment of nonsuit is
Reversed. *42
Cited: Collins v. Casualty Co.,
(4)