44 Ind. App. 27 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
Appellee sued the appellant to recover damages for the alleged conversion of a horse and for injuries alleged to have been received by said horse while in possession of said company under a contract of hiring. The amended complaint was in three paragraphs, the substance of each being as follows: The first paragraph alleges that on August 8, 1906, Taylor was the owner, and entitled to immediate possession, of a horse worth $175; that on said day the defendant, being in the possession of the horse, converted and disposed of the same to its own use, to Taylor’s damage in the sum of $175.
The second paragraph alleges that on August 8, Taylor was the owner of a horse worth $175; that the telephone company, on said day, hired the horse from Taylor to be used in its business at Lanesville, Indiana, and agreed to pay seventy-five cents per day hire; that the telephone company so immoderately, improperly, negligently and carelessly used such horse, and neglected to care for the same, that on August 20, it was injured and rendered worthless, to Taylor’s damage in the sum of $175.
The third paragraph contains the same allegations as the second with reference to the ownership, value and hiring of the horse, the compensation to be paid per day, and the manner in which the horse became sick, and in addition alleges that the telephone company placed the horse in the keeping of Albert Day, a liveryman, and permitted it to remain there, and, upon demand, refused to pay the claim of said Day; that the horse is now of the value of only $25, and the liveryman’s bill amounts to $50, whereby the horse is lost to Taylor.
The defendant answered the amended complaint by general denial, and by special plea of settlement and payment, which was denied by plaintiff. The case was tried by jury and judgment for $175 rendered in favor of plaintiff. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overrated. This action of the court is relied upon for reversal,
Instructions seven and ten read as follows: “ (7) If the defendant hired of the plaintiff the horse described in the complaint, and under the contract mentioned in the complaint, it would be the duty of the defendant when through with said horse to return it to the plaintiff at the stable of the plaintiff in Georgetown, Indiana, unless it was agreed between the parties that said horse was to be surrendered at some other place.” “(10) If the defendant obtained the possession of the horse described in the complaint under the contract of hiring therein described, and such contract was for no certain time, and the defendant refused and neglected to redeliver said horse to the plaintiff on demand, and the plaintiff thereby was deprived of said horse, then such facts would be evidence that the defendant converted such horse to its own use.”
The questions thus raised make it proper to set out a summary of the evidence. On August 6, 1906, the appellee owned the horse in question, which was three and one-half years old, sound in every particular, and worth from $175 to $200. On said date the appellant, through its foreman, Carl Darbo, at Georgetown, Indiana, where appellee lived and where his horse was kept, hired it from the appellee for use in appellant’s business. On Monday, August 6, 1906, the horse was sound and uninjured, and on that day was used in the work along the line, and at night he was driven to Lanes-ville, where board was engaged for the men at the hotel of Albert Day. In connection with the hotel Day ran a livery barn and feed stable, and the horse was put in his barn, where it was fed and cared for by Day at appellant’s expense. On Tuesday morning the horse was lame. Darbo
In behalf of appellant it is argued that no demand for the
Whatever the facts of the controversy may have been, the verdict is supported by evidence, and we are not warranted in reversing the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.