188 N.W. 166 | N.D. | 1922
This is an action for personal injuries. The defendant' has appealed from an order denying judgment non obstante or, in the alternative, a new trial. The facts are: On July 26, 1918, upon a stieet in Minot, the pliantiff was severely bitten in the right arm by a horse of the defendant. The plaintiff, then aged 72 years, was walking upon the sidewalk with her daughter. The defendant’s team, one of the horses of which occasioned the injuries, was attached to a garbage wagon then engaged in hauling garbage, pursuant to defendant’s contract with the city. In accordance with some of the testimony, the team was then unattended. The driver came from a building near some 30 seconds to a mniute after the plaintiff was bitten. The team was not fastened in any manner.
An ordinance of the city of Minot then in force provides as follows:
“Unlawful to Leave Team Loose in Street. — Any person who shall leave any horse, horses, mule, mules or other animals attached to any carriage, wagon or sleigh in any street, avenue, alley or other uninclosed place within the city, without properly fastening such animals, shall be subject to a fine of not less than one dollar, nor more than nineteen dollars for each offense.”
One witness, a pedestrian then passing by, testified that the noise and the shaking of the harness attracted his attention. He heard the-snap of the horse’s teeth. He turned around and saw the horse pulling back, just at the edge of the sidewalk. He saw the plaintiff down on the sidewalk and her daughter and another persons picking her up. The plaintiff testified that the horse stepped on the sidewalk. No evidence was introduced concerning knowledge by the defendant of the vicious propensities of the animal nor concerning plaintiff’s contributory negligence. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $2,400.
Decision.
The propriety or validity of the ordinance is not questioned. But the plaintiff maintains that it has no application; that it is a mere traffic regulation; that its sole purpose is to prevent runaways with attendant injuries to pedestrians and other property. Reliance is placed upon the case of Putermann v. Simon, 127 Mo. App. 511, 105 S. W. 1098. In that case, the ordinance involved provided that any person who shall leave a
Pursuant to the instructions and through their verdict, the jury have found that the horse was left unattended without proper fastening upon ?. street. The evidence supports such finding. The only question remaining is whether the violation of the ordinance was the proximate cause of the injuries. Upon definite instructions in this regard, the jury found that it was. No exceptions are taken to the instructions. The defendant contends, however, that the evidence is insufficient to warrant such finding: That if the horse had been attended, or properly fastened, perchance, with an ordinary tie strap to a lug or hitching post, the horse, nevertheless, could have reached around, readily, and bitten the plaintiff. However, the minds of ordinary prudent men might reasonably draw different conclusions concerning what would constitute a proper fastening, and whether a horse, properly fastened, would or could step on a sidewalk and thus bite and injure the plaintiff. Felton v. Ry. Co., 32 N. D. 223, 235, 155 N. W. 23; Farmers’ Mercantile Co. v. N. P. R. Co., 27 N. D. 302, 316, 317, 146 N. W. 550; 29 Cyc. 632. Obviously, one purpose of the statute was to lessen such dangers and to prevent such injuries. The fact that the horse stepped upon the sidewalk and the physical surrounding facts presented to the jury more than mere probabilities that the violation of the statute proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries.
The order is affirmed, with costs.