60 Barb. 198 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
The facts in this case to be assumed on this appeal are, that the defendant hired a horse, buggy and harness of the plaintiff, a livery stable keeper at Palmyra,;,to go to Macedón. The defendant
The court charged the jury, that unless the defendant knew, when he got into the-buggy and took the horse in his charge, that the bits were not in the mouth, there was no negligence made out; and that the defendant was not liable for the negligence on the part of the person who harnessed the horse. To these instructions, exceptions were taken.
Some other questions were litigated on the trial, but under the charge the verdict might have been based upon the ground that the defendant was not liable for any negligence on the part of the hostler, unless he knew the bits were out of the mouth. We think this charge was erroneous.
The hirer of a thing is responsible for that degree of diligence which all prudent men use in keeping their own goods of the same kind. (Story on Bailm. § 399.) The hirer is not only liable for his own personal default, but also for that of his servants and persons employed by him. (Id. § 400.)
The hostler, or person who acted as such, at the inn, was not the servant of the livery stable keeper at Palmyra, but was the servant of the innkeeper, and as between the plaintiff and the defendant, was the servant'of the defend
Could the hirer excuse himself by showing that he had employed some proper person to feed the horse, but that person had neglected his duty ? This would hardly be claimed. Would it make any difference ,if the person so employed were an innkeeper ? There is no principle upon which such a distinction can be made.
The case, of a hirer of a horse which falls sick during a journey, without the fault of the hirer, who employs the services of a professed farrier, who makes a mistake in the treatment, is not analogous. There, the hifer is under no obligation to cure the horse, but only to do all that a prudent man can be required to do, that is, to employ a farrier presumed to have the requisite knowledge and skill, which the hirer himself is not supposed to possess. And in this he acts as the agent of the owner, his own fault or neglect or act not having occasioned the necessity for employing anybody.
But an innkeeper, or, the servant of an innkeeper, is not presumed to possess any peculiar learning or skill not accessible to other persons, which authorizes the hirer of a horse to commit the proper feeding, or harnessing, of the horse to him, without responsibility for his acts or neglects.
We think the instruction that the defendant was not
Mullin, P. J., and Johnson and Talcott, Justices.]