10 N.Y.S. 94 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
This action is for the recovery of damages for the injury sustained by the plaintiff in a fall from a carriage caused by a vicious horse which the plaintiff hired from the defendant. The cause was tried at the circuit before a jury, and the defendant obtained a verdict. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment; and, although a motion was made for a new trial on the minutes of the court, and denied, yet the plaintiff has taken no appeal from the order denying such motion. On this appeal, therefore, we are confined to questions of law solely. We cannot review the case, upon the facts, to determine whether the verdict was against the evidence, but we can review the testimony to ascertain whether there was any evidence to support the verdict; and, if we find none, we can reverse the judgment, for then the verdict was erroneous as matter of law. Such an examination of the testimony discloses the fact that the evidence is not contradictory, and stands substantially uncontradicted.
There is also a fatal exception in the case which will require a new trial. One of the witnesses for the defendant, who had stated that he had frequently driven the horse, was asked this question: “Question. State to the jury what are the principal characteristics of that horse. ” This was'objected to as immaterial. Objection overruled, and the plaintiff excepted. After the uncostradicted testimony that the horse was vicious, and had caused the accident by the very habit which the defendant knew he had, the evidence respecting the character or disposition of the horse was improperly admitted. It was entirely immaterial what the general disposition or character of the horse was. In obedience to his well-known vicious propensity, he had turned round suddenly in the road, upset the wagon, and injured the plaintiff, and that gave the plaintiff a cause of action, and imposed liability upon the defendant for the result; and evidence of the character of the horse was entirely immaterial, and well calculated to divert the attention of the jury from the proper consideration of the real question at issue. Buckley v. Leonard, 4 Denio, 500. In that case, where the owner of a dog which had bitten other persons had notice of the fact, and afterwards suffered him to be at large, when he bit the plaintiff, it was held that it was no answer to the action for the injury to the plaintiff that the dog was generally inoffensive; and Jewett, J., in giving the opinion in that case, said: “The evidence given by the defendant of the mild character and deportment of the dog, I think, was improperly admitted. It was immaterial, If the evidence proved that the dog bit the plaintiff; that the defendant was the owner, and knew or had notice that the dog had been accustomed to bite others,—he was responsible for the injury, however high, the character of the dog for mildness stood among the neighbors. Such evidence was well calculated to divert the jury from a proper consideration of the real point in issue. * * * The evidence of the injury to the plaintiff, of the dog having previously bitten others, and that the defendant had notice of it, stands uncontradicted; and these facts were abundantly sufficient to require the jury to find for the plaintiff. ” The same principle applies to this case.
So our conclusion is: First, that the verdict is entirely unsupported by the evidence; and, second, that a fatal error was committed in the admission of the testimony respecting the characteristics of the horse. As the testimony stood at the close of the case, the evidence required a verdict for the plaintiff; and the trial judge would have been entirely justified in directing the jury to find for the plaintiff, leaving the question of damages alone for the consideration of the jury. The judgment should therefore be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.