34 Mo. App. 659 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, a livery stable keeper, in the town of Poplar Bluff, liked to the defendant a saddle horse, and claims that the same was lost through defendant’s negligence. He thereupon brought this action for the recovery of its value. Upon the trial of the cause before a jury, verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the defendant.
The plaintiff appealing assigns for error the rulings of the court upon the instructions.
The record recites that the evidence introduced tended to show the following facts :
“ The plaintiff was the owner of a livery stable in the town of Poplar Bluff, situated on one of the main streets of said city, about four or five blocks from the plaintiff’s residence, situated on another street.
The stable was, in the absence of plaintiff, in charge of a hired servant. Sometime in the day-time of the thirty-first of December, the defendant came to plaintiff’s livery stable and hired from him a horse with a saddle and bridle, and did not return with said horse and saddle and bridle till the evening of that day about 6 :30, p. m. On his arrival at plaintiff s stable he found
That when defendant tried the door and found it locked he did not perceive the wire which was usually attached to said bell, and it could not have been there without his coming in contact with it, in his efforts to open the door.
The bell was a large one and could he heard all over town, and could be rung by p ulling a wire cord attached to the bell and hanging in front of the stable door.
The stable door consisted of double doors, two below and two above, opening out from the stable, and it was customary to have the upper doors always open so that when the stable was locked only the lower doors were locked. Some times when the upper doors were closed the wire cord attached to the bell would catch between the doors, and conceal that part of the wire passing in front of the upper doors. The upper doors were closed that night.
That defendant did not attempt to make an effort to find plaintiff or the boy employed at the stable, but tied the horse with care and security, the night being dark, in the street, to an upright post or pillar supporting a wooden frame awning above the stable door extending across the sidewalk about six feet from the door and in front of it, and left him there. That the horse disappeared from some unexplained cause and was wholly lost to the plaintiff and was worth one hundred dollars.
The plaintiff asked five instructions which the court refused to give. Four of these, being numbered 1, 2, 4 and 5, in record stated in general terms that the defendant, as a bailee for hire, was bound to use ordinary care,
There could be no valid objection to these instructions, and their refusal was error, unless the propositions therein stated were embodied in some other instructions given by the court. The court of its own motion gave an instruction, numbered 9 in the record, which tells the jury that the defendant was liable, if the plaintiff suffered loss by his negligent action in failing to return the horse. This instruction, however, fails to inform the jury as to the degree of care to which the plaintiff was bound, and also fails to inform them what elements they might take into consideration in determining whether the defendant did exercise such care. Hence the instruction thus given was in no sense a proper substitution for the plaintiff’s refused instructions.
Upon the defendant’s request, the court gave the following instructions :
“ The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence the defendant hired the horse described in plaintiff’s statement from the plaintiff and used him reasonably and returned him to the plaintiff in due time on his return, then the jury should find for the defendant.”
“The court further instructs the jury that it is the duty of plaintiff to keep his stable and place of business open at all reasonable hours for the letting and return of his horses, and if the jury believe from the evidence in
Both of these instructions are erroneous. The first because it assumes that the defendant returned the the horse, of which there is no evidence in the record, and the second, because it assumes that the plaintiff was under a legal duty to keep his place open during all reasonable hours, and could not recover if a failure to keep his stable open contributed to the loss, neither of which propositions is correct without qualifications.
The instructions given by the court of its own motion, and numbered 11,12 and 13 in the record, are equally erroneous. They are objectionable in the first place as being comments upon the evidence and argument. Chouquette v. Barada, 28 Mo. 491; Anderson v. Kincheloe, 30 Mo. 520; Finn v. Public Schools, 39 Mo. 59, 67 ; Rose v. Spies, 44 Mo. 20; Jones v. Jones, 57 Mo. 138. They are further objectionable in telling the jury that certain facts, if found by them, will amount to such negligence on the part of the plaintiff or the defendant as to debar or justify a recovery, a question which, under the facts of this case, is to be passed upon by the jury and not by the court.
It results that the court erred in its instructions to the jury, to plaintiff’s prejudice, and that for such error the judgment must be reversed. Reversed and remanded.