94 Vt. 218 | Vt. | 1920
The plaintiffs sought to recover damages for a. horse fatally injured in collision on the highway with an automobile driven by the defendant. The action is tort for negligence, and the trial, which was by jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant. The plaintiffs argue exceptions taken to the admission and exclusion of certain evidence, and to the failure of the court to charge in certain particulars.
The highway on which the accident occurred passes through the plaintiffs’ farm. The farm buildings are on the west side of the highway, and there is a public water trough on the east side a few rods distant, used by the plaintiffs for watering stock. The horse in question was one of a pair of work horses that some fifteen minutes before the accident had been unhitched from a wagon in plaintiffs’ dooryard and suffered to go to the water trough to drink. They were still harnessed and wore bridles with blinders. After drinking, the horses went to feeding southerly along opposite sides of the highway. Mr. Duprat, whom we will refer to as the plaintiff, and a hired man were seated in the yard watching them. The defendant’s car was preceded by another automobile that passed the horses apparently unobserved. As the defendant approached, the horse on the opposite side of the road from the house threw up its head as though frightened and started to run along the road toward the house. As the automobile came alongside, the horse turned into the traveled track and the collision occurred.
His version of the circumstances of the accident had been fully developed in his direct examination by the plaintiff. The rate of speed at which he was running, the condition of the ear, ■and the precautions taken to avoid the accident had been gone into at length. In addition, it was proper for him to show by his own testimony that nothing possible to be done was omitted. McGovern v. Mays & Smith, 75 Vt. 104, 53 Atl. 326. Whether •or not he had the car under control was not, as now urged, a matter of opinion, but a question of fact of which the witness had knowledge.
A somewhat extended discussion of this question will be found in Rutland Ry., etc., Co. v. Williams, 90 Vt. 276, 98 Atl. 85, where the cases are collected. See also Drown’s Guardian v. Chesley’s Est., 92 Vt. 19, 24, 102 Atl. 102; Pope v. Hogan, 92 Vt. 250, 258, 102 Atl. 937. The request was also fatally defective in that it wholly ignored the fact that in any event the
Judgment affirmed.