118 Cal. 315 | Cal. | 1897
Plaintiff recovered damages for injuries inflicted by a vicious bull, the property of defendant. lie averred that, prior to the attack upon him, the bull was of a vicious disposition and dangerous character, and that the fact was known to defendant, its agents, and employees. He also averred that the injury was occasioned by the negligent conduct of defendant’s servants engaged in driving the bull upon a public highway. Defendant appeals from the judgment and from the order denying a new trial.
The facts disclosed by the evidence are as follows: In April, 1895, the defendant, which was engaged in the lumber business in the Sierra Nevada mountains, in Fresno county, sent two of its employees, John Lovelace and G. W. Treece, to a ranch on Kings river known as “The Grant,” where its cattle had been pasturing during the winter, to bring them to the mountains.
Over these facts there is little or no dispute; but under them appellant contends that it is entitled to a reversal. Herein it is insisted that tbe evidence fails to show foreknowledge by defendant of tbe Vicious disposition of tbe animal.
It is well settled in cases such as this that the owner of an animal, not naturally vicious, is not liable for an injury done by it, unless two propositions are established: 1. That the animal in fact was vicious; and 2. That the owner knew it. (Finney v. Curtis, 78 Cal. 498.) Thus, if an animal theretofore of peaceable disposition, while in charge of the master or of a servant, suddenly and unexpectedly, either through fear or rage, inflicts injury, neither is responsible, if at the time be was in the exercise of due care. But, conversely, the owner of such an animal knowing its vicious propensities is liable for injury inflicted by it upon property or upon the person of one who is free from fault. (Laverone v. Mangianli, 41 Cal. 138; 10 Am. Rep. 269.)
These propositions are accepted by appellant’s counsel; but their contention in argument is that tbe knowledge by defendant’s servants of tbe viciousness was acquired at such time and under such circumstances that it could not be conveyed to tbe defendant, and, therefore, could not be imputed to it in law; and, further, that tbe men engaged in driving tbe bull were not agents of tbe corporation, but mere servants, not having general charge of tbe animal, but sent upon a limited mission with regard to it, and that for this additional reason their knowledge cannot be held to be tbe knowledge of their employer.
It is quite true that knowledge by or notice to a servant charged with no duty in tbe matter, of tbe vicious propensities of an animal owned by tbe master, is not notice to tbe master. Tbe rule, however, is that a servant’s knowledge, to whom an animal is in
In tbe present case Lovelace and Treeee bad been put in complete charge of tbe bull. It is a fundamental and most important principle of tbe law governing tbe responsibility of masters that whatever duty they owe to the public (or to their employees) must be performed, and a failure to perform, or improper performance, cannot be excused by a showing that execution was delegated to a servant even of approved carefulness, knowledge, or skill. It must further be shown that the servant in the particular matter exercised the full degree of care and showed the requisite amount of skill. And this is true, however subordinate or menial may be the rank of the servant. "Whatever be his position, in that special employment he represents the master, and within its scope his knowledge is the master’s knowledge, his acts the master’s acts. (Higgins v. Williams, 114 Cal. 176; Donnelly v. San Francisco Bridge Co., 117 Cal. 417.) Everyone, whether acting individually or through agents, is bound to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to the person or property of another. (Civ. Code, secs. 1708, 1714, 2330, 2338.) Therefore, when, as here, Lovelace and Treeee had been sent upon an independent mission, and put in complete charge of the animal, they stood in the performance of their task in the place of the defendant, and the question of defendant’s responsibility will be answered as may be answered the inquiry: What would have been the master’s responsibility and liability had he personally been in charge of the animal? To this there can be but one answer. He would have been liable. Twice before on that very day had the bull evinced its ugly disposition by attacks actual and threatened. Here was ample proof of the fact of viciousness and of the knowledge of that fact brought home to the master.
There is yet another and independent view of the matter which may be taken, and in this is eliminated all question of the master’s knowledge. That view turns upon the master’s liability for the negligent performance by a servant of a duty within the scope of his employment. The driving of the bull upon the highway was not only within the employment of Lovelace and Treeee,
Precisely such a cause of action as the one which we have been considering was that of Ficken v. Jones, 28 Cal. 618; and another in which the question is considered with much elaboration is that in Barnum v. Terpenning, 75 Mich. 557.
This is unquestionably a distinct cause of action from that which would hold the master responsible by reason of his fore • knowledge; but the complaint in this case sufficiently charges upon both causes of action. True, they are joined in one count, but no objection was made to the pleading upon this ground.
Appellant complains of the instructions given by the court as being contradictory, and self-destructive. In one part of the charge the jury was instructed, in effect, that defendant was liable for injury resulting from the negligence of its employees in the performance of a given duty. In another part the jury was told that before plaintiff could recover he must establish the facts that the bull, at the time he inflicted injury, was vicious, and that defendant had knowledge of its vicious character.
Tbe jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff in tbe sum of five thousand five hundred dollars. There was, as is usual, much conflict in tbe testimony of tbe physicians over tbe nature and permanency of tbe injuries. But on tbe part of plaintiff it was shown that tbe coccyx was fractured, tbe muscles of tbe region atrophied, tbe sciatic nerve tender and painful to pressure, with other symptoms of spinal injury, upholding a finding that plaintiff’s health was seriously impaired, if not positively wrecked. It may not be said under sucb a statement that tbe verdict was excessive.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.