25 Ind. 321 | Ind. | 1865
Wycoff brought suit against Fultz. The complaint sets forth that, on the 1st day of February, 1863, the.plaintiff was the keeper of a lively stable in the town of Edinburg, Johnson county, and as such it was his business-
On the trial, the court permitted the appellee to testify, ■over the objection of the appellant, that “The prospect for the brown stallion mentioned in the complaint for a stand, during the season he was sick with the distemper, was good. The horse if properly handled could probably have tended, and would probably have received, from eighty to
The appellant, at the proper timé, requested the court to give the following instructions to the jury: “If the jury should find that all the material allegations of the complaint are proved by a preponderance of evidence, then, in estimating the damages for the injury to the brown stallion mentioned in the complaint, you will have to find the difference in his value at the time he, took the distemper and after he got over it; also the cost of curing him; also, what it would have cost the plaintiff to procure another stallion, as good and similar in all respects, for the time he was disabled from the sickness. And in estimating the damages you cannot take into consideration the probable profits the plaintiff would have made, if the horse had not become diseased, in making his stands through the season during which he was disabled from sickness.” The court refused the instruction, and the appellant excepted. This is the third error assigned by the appellant.
The first objection urged to the sufficiency of the complaint is, that the horses alleged to have been injured are not described with sufficient certainty. This objection is not presented by the demurrer. The statute provides that, “Where the allegations of a pleading are so indefinite or uncertain that the precise nature of the charge or defense is not apparent, the court may require the pleading to be made definite or certain by amendment.” 2 G. & H., § 90, p. 112. It was held, in the case of Prindle v. Caruthers, 15 N. Y. R., 425, that such objections could not be presented by demurrer, but that a motion to make the faulty pleading more definite and certain was the correct practice.
Again, it is insisted that the averment that the plaintiff kept a livery stable does not exclude the idea that he received sick and diseased horses, and that an averment of the condition in which he accepted horses should have been
The appellant objects that the complaint does not aver that the injury resulted without the fault or negligence of the plaintiff, and it is insisted that the averments show that it did result from such negligence. The averments are that the plaintiff, being ignorant of the condition of the horse, and relying upon and believing the representations of the defendant, received it; and that the defendant knew that the disease was contagious in its earlier stages, and that the defendant knew that his horse then had the disease in the stage in which it was contagious. We know of no rule that would require the keeper of a livery stable to inform himself so thoroughly in farriery as to enable him to determine, upon inspection, the exact stage any disease had reached in a horse brought to be kept in his stable, and whose owner assumed to state from his own knowledge the condition of the animal. This must certainly be the case where, as in the present instance, the danger of communicating the disease depended, as it is averred, upon the time which had elapsed since it had been contracted by the defendant’s horse, a fact which must have been peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant; and as it is charged that he knew that the danger depended upon this lapse of time, he must he held hable for the damage resulting from his false statement in regard to this fact. It seems to us that, upon the complaint, the plaintiff had a right to rely upon such statements, and hold the owner responsible for their truth. The defendant knew the risk to which he was exposing the plaintiff, and should have been careful not to mislead him by his representations. That the defendant is liable for the injury resulting to the plaintiff, is decided in Rose v. Wallace, 11 Ind. 112, which is a case exactly in point. The demurrer was correctly overruled.
It is objected that the plaintiff was permitted to testify as to the probable value of the services of the horse during the season. "We do not know what instructions were given to the jury to aid them in determining the measure of damages, but it seems to us the evidence offered was proper for the consideration of the jury in forming such estimate. In an action for libel, for publishing a statement in the London Times that a vessel was unseaworthy, the plaintiff'was allowed to prove the average profits on such a voyage as was contemplated, and the jury were told that, with a view to estimate the damage, they might loqk to the plaintiff’s business, and his general rate of profit, but that the evidence of profits was not regarded properly as a measure of
The judgment is affirmed, with costs and five per cent, damages.