153 N.Y.S. 447 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
Defendant’s team of horses, attached to a street sweeper and unattended by a driver, were running away on Third avenue in the borough of Brooklyn. The plaintiff’s intestate attempted to seize the reins and stop the horses, but was carried under the sweeper and killed.
There are two questions : (1) Whether the fact of the horses running away is of itself sufficient evidence that the defendant was negligent; (2) whether there was such imminent danger to life as justified the undertaking.
The defendant’s proposition is that the fact of a team of driverless horses running through a busy street in a city is consistent with the hypothesis that they escaped from a driver using requisite care, and that the burden is on the plaintiff to negative such care. It is abnormal for horses without a driver to travel in a public street, and it is none the less so if they are running away. Horses are required to be attended or hitched because experience teaches that under such conditions their escape is exceptional and contrary to the usual order of events. Where, then, they are found loose and unattended the primary inference is that the attendance or fastening that commonly precludes escape was absent. It is true that experience also shows that animals escape the mastery of prudent and skillful custodians, but such' happenings are anomalous. The question, then, is what inference should be drawn from a phenomenon that deviates from the general, and falls into the excep
The authorities are not in accord o.n this question, nor do I attempt to reconcile decisions. In this court it has been decided that the fact of horses running unattended in the street is sufficient evidence of negligence, that is, that thereby a prima facie case is presented. The rule was definitely stated in Kelly v. Adelmann (72 App. Div. 590). It is suggested that the decision rests, not upon reasoning, but upon the authority of Pearl v. Macaulay (6 App. Div. 70) and Doherty v. Sweetser (82 Hun, 556), and that the facts in neither case make it authority for the rule stated. The facts in the second case are somewhat different, but the rule in Kelly v. Adelmann is held distinctly. The decision follows the expressions in Unger v. Forty-second Street, etc., R. R. Co. (51 N. Y. 497, 500). The appellant prefers the decision in Gottwald v. Bernheimer (6 Daly, 212). The opinion of Judge Joseph F. Daly approves of the rule for which appellant contends. There is also reference to an apparent approval of Gottwald v. Bernheimer and its holding in McQahie v. McClennen (86 App. Div. 263), but it was upon the point “that the mere running away of a team of
The judgment and order should be-affirmed, with costs.
Present—Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Stapleton and Rich, JJ,
The parties hereto having stipulated in open court that this case may be disposed of by a court of four, the decision is as follows: Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.