The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action under section 1347, of the Code of Laws,, which is as follows: “Any person who shall receive bodily injury or damage in his person or property through a defect or in the negligent repair of a highway, causeway, or bridge, may recover in an action against the county, the amount of actual damage sustained by him by reason thereof: Provided, Such person has not in any way brought about such injury or da'mage by his own act, or negligently contributed thereto. If such defect in any road, causeway, or bridge existed before such injury or damage occurred, such damage shall not be recovered by the person so injured, if his.load exceeded the ordinary weight: Provided, further, That such county shall not be liable unless such defect was occasioned by its neglect or mismanagement.” * * *
The material allegations of the complaint are: That while the plaintiff was being driven in his buggy along the public highway and across the bridge his horse caught his foot in a hole or break in the bridge, which became so firmly fastened that it became necessary for the plaintiff to go to the assistance of his horse in order to extricate his foot, and that while plaintiff was trying to get his horse out of said hole, the horse fell upon the plaintiff and thereby broke his leg; and that the said injury was caused by the negligent failure of the county to keep the said bridge in repair. That the injuries sustained by the plaintiff were caused by the negligence and mismanagement of the defendant as above set out, and without any negligence on the part of the plaintiff, .nor did he negligently contribute thereto.
The defendant demurred to the complaint on .the following grounds:
“1. It does not appear therein that the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury was a defect in the repair of a highway or bridge; it appearing, on the contrary, that the proxi *204 mate cause of plaintiff’s injury was his own act in trying to extricate his horse’s foot from a hole in the bridge, in which it fiad become fastened, his horse falling upon him while so engaged and thus causing his injury, for which, injury so caused, defendant is not liable.
“2. It is not alleged therein that the plaintff did not in any way bring about his injury or damage by his own act, nor negligently contribute thereto.”
Both grounds of demurrer were sustained and the complaint dismissed.
The first question that will be considered is whether there was error in sustaining the ground of demurrer numbered 1.
The rule is thus stated in
Harrison
v.
Berkeley,
This language is quoted with approval in the case of
Pickens
v.
R. R.,
54 S. C., 498,
Indeed, the rule is well settled, but the difficulty arises in its application to the facts of the particular case.
It unquestionably appears from the allegations of the complaint, that the injury to the horse was the direct and proximate result of negligence on the part of the defendant. The conduct of the plaintiff, in attempting to rescue his horse from the dangerous position in which it was placed by the alleged wrongful act of the defendant, cannot be said to have been an independent agency in causing injury to the plaintiff if he acted in such a manner as was naturally and reasonably to be expected under the circumstances.
It is contended that he should have gone elsewhere for assistance. In the first place, the danger of loss by the destruction of his property was pressing, and in the second place, it would have savoured of cruelty to the animal, to *206 have left it with almost a certainty, that it would have broken its leg, in endeavoring to extricate its foot from the hole in the bridge. The act of the plaintiff was such as might reasonably and naturally have been expected from a man of ordinary prudence actuated by a commendable desire to relieve an animal from an extremely dangerous position. There was error, therefore, in sustaining this ground of demurrer.
The next assignment of error that will be considered is in sustaining- the second ground of demurrer.
This language is quoted with approval in the case of
Duncan
v.
Greenville Co.,
73 S. C., 254,
Our construction as to' the first of said contingencies is that in order to bar a recovery, the act of the person injured must’be the efficient cause of the injury, i. -e., the immediate and proximate cause thereof.
The allegations of the complaint are sufficient to show that the act of the plaintiff, was not the proximate cause of the injury. Therefore, there was error in sustaining this ground of demurrer.
*207 It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the case remanded to that Court for a new trial.
