35 Ky. 173 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1837
delivered the opinion of the Court,
Hollingsworth having obtained a verdict and judgment against Green, in an action of detinue, for a gold watch—several errors are assigned by Green, as arising from instructions, and refusals to instruct the jury, on the trial.
It appears front the Bill of exceptions, that, the parties being intimate acquaintances and cordial friends, and both being in a jocund mood on a public occasion, whilst Hollingsworth was a candidate for the Legislature, Green
Hollingsworth could not recover unless the jury had concluded that the watch had been bailed to Green; for it is evident that, if it was sold upon an illegal consideration, although the contract was void, the law would not help either party, standing, as they would, in equal fault. It is to just such a case that the maxim in pari delicto potior conditio defendentis, is conclusively applicable.
And whether, upon the hypothesis that there was a bailment, there should have been a recovery, depends on the following considerations:—
First. If the bailment was a simple deposit, with implied leave to carry the watch in the pocket, and if it was lost by the bailee, he is not liable unless he was guilty of gross negligence, or unless, prior to the loss he had violated his implied obligation to return it in a
But the evidence will hardly allow the deduction that there was a mere deposite; and if it would, it would perhaps, also shew, that it was a deposite at the instance of Green, rather than of Hollingsworth, and therefore required the observance of ordinary care at least. '
Second. If there was a simple loan, more than ordinary care was required by law. And if the watch was in fact, lost, as alleged, it was the province of the Court to decide, as to what was gross, ordinary, and slight neglect, and that of the jury, to determine whether the facts established the one, or the other, or any degree of negligence.
If the watch was loaned to Green, when it was to be returned was a fact to be ascertained by the jury from the circumstances proved; and if those circumstances conduced to establish no special time, and, from the nature of the transaction as proved, the jury could have inferred that the parties actually intended a beneficial loan, the law made it the duty of Green to return the watch in a reasonable time. But, in such a state of case, of indefinite loan for use, a court could not decide that Green was guilty of a breach of his implied obligation, in not returning the watch within three weeks, or the time that elapsed before the alleged loss of it. Nor could it be decided, as a matter of law, upon the facts proved, that there was gross or even slight neglect in carrying the watch in his pocket when he was hunting. The use of it may have been, and probably was, especially important on such an occasion; and therefore, if there was culpable negligence in thus using it, the consequence might be that he could not have used it at all, without being responsible for an accidental loss of it in consequence of using it. But there may, prima facie, have been at least slight neglect in losing the watch out of his pocket.
If the watch was loaned without any express agreement, and if Green failed, upon a demand of restitution,