200 A.D. 235 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
September 29, 1919, four horses belonging to Mr. Kilmer were traveling on the macadam State highway toward Binghamton. They were being taken from his stock farm to Binghamton where he resided. They were in charge of two young men named Dodd and Bone, each at the time being about nineteen and a half years old. Dodd was riding one of the horses and leading another beside him and at his right. About ten or fifteen feet behind this pair came Bone riding one of the horses named Rubia Grande and leading another beside him and at his right. All the witnesses agree that the two horses being ridden were entirely or partly off the macadam and on their right side of the road and of course the other two horses were still farther out of the road. They came to a point where there was a fruit stand on the opposite side of the road. Standing in front of this fruit stand and about opposite the horses was a wagon drawn by two horses, one of the occupants of which wagon was negotiating with the proprietor of the fruit stand. This being the situation, a Pierce-Arrow car owned and driven by the defendant, who was accompanied by his wife on their way from Elmira to New York, approached facing the four horses and passed them on one side and the wagon on the other. Rubia Grande came in contact with the automobile, sustained a broken left hind leg, and had to be killed. She is claimed to have been a valuable breeding mare and had engaged in running races. All of the horses had unusual value. Rubia Grande was insured by the plaintiff for $5,000. Plaintiff paid this insurance to the owner, was subrogated to'his rights and brings this action against the defendant for negligence in causing the death of the horse. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant.
All the witnesses agree that the four horses were standing at the instant of collision. Defendant and his wife testified that when they rounded a curve in the road and first came into view of the horses 700 or 800 feet distant, Dodd had dismounted and the horses were at a standstill. The testimony of a number of witnesses called by the plaintiff justifies the inference that the
If, as the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses indicates, the four horses were stopped to facilitate the passage of the defendant’s automobile, the question naturally suggests itself why, instead of stopping the horses, did not Dodd and Bone stop the automobile as they might have done “ on signal by raising the hand.” (Highway Law, § 286, subd. 8, added as subd. 2 by Laws of 1910, chap. 374, as amd. by Laws of 1918, chap. 540.)
After a charge of unusual clarity and comprehensiveness which ought to have been satisfactory to both parties, the defendant’s counsel requested the court to charge “ that if the jury should find that the owner of the mare or his agents were guilty of negligence in intrusting the care of this mare under all the circumstances in the case to Bone, that negligence is attributable to the plaintiff in this case.” The court charged the request and the plaintiff excepted. Just previously in this same connection counsel had referred to Bone as “ this inexperienced boy.” This characterization illustrates the vice of the charge. The only question for the jury on this branch of the case was whether Bone at the time of the collision exercised due care. If he was then negligent the plaintiff could not recover. If he was not then negligent, no matter how inexperienced or incompetent generally he may have been, the plaintiff could recover provided the defendant was negligent. (Gorman v. New York, Chicago & St. Louis R. R. Co., 194 N. Y. 488; Warner v. New York Central R. R. Co., 44 id. 465, 471.) Permission to the jury to predicate contributory negligence on the mere fact of placing Bone in charge of Rubia Grande was clearly erroneous. It diverted the minds of the jury from the real question as above indicated and allowed them to speculate on the possibility that if some older or more experienced or competent person had been in charge he might have done something to obviate the accident. He might have signaled the defendant to stop or taken some other precaution. The defendant proved at the trial that Bone might have been a person of somewhat irresponsible habits; that he had never been employed by Mr. Kilmer except on this particular occasion to ride the horse from his farm to Binghamton; that he had never been on the back of a running horse and other facts indicating that his selection for this particular work might have been indiscreet. It further appeared that a man by the name of Hadsell, the superintendent of Mr. Kilmer’s stock farm and the man in charge of these horses, supervised the task of taking them to Binghamton. He accompanied them in a Ford automobile to a point about a quarter of a mile from the place of the accident. There he left them and hastened on to the next village. Quite naturally, therefore, under these circumstances the jury might attribute negligence to the fact of leaving the horse in charge of Bone and might fail to confine their attention solely to the conduct
For this reason the judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
See General Highway Traffic Law, § 12, subd. 14.— [Rep.