The plaintiff sued for damages resulting from the kick of a horse alleged to have been kept by the defendant with knowledge of his vicious habit of kicking.
The plaintiff and his employer testified that the defendant said to them, “I am sorry, boy. I told them to put that horse downstairs before. You are the second man he kicked this morning,” and “I told that fellow to put that horse downstairs, he was a kicking horse.” Such an admission is evidence of knowledge of a propensity to kick, and, though less convincingly, of the existence of the habit in the horse. Its probative value is for the jury to determine. Linnehan v. Sampson, 126 Mass. 506.
None of the cases cited by the defendant sustains his' proposition that, where such an admission is uncorroborated by other evidence and is denied by the witnesses of the party charged with the admission, there is nothing on which a jury can base a finding against such party. Linnehan v. Sampson, supra. Bowditch Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Buffum, 2 Gray, 550. Conant v. Evans, 202 Mass. 34. It well may be that an admission standing alone does not contain enough to sustain a verdict; but that is because the facts stated in the admission, or justly to be inferred from it, are not sufficient to make out a case; and not because they are put before the jury in the form of an admission. Webber v. McDonnell, 254 Mass. 387, illustrates such a case. Zandan v. Radner, 242 Mass. 503. Barnett v. Roberts, 243 Mass. 233.
The admission is to be weighed with other evidence. The party is not bound by it, especially if there is other evidence
In this case it was for the jury by its verdict, and not for the judge in his ruling on the motion for a directed verdict, to determine whether the defendant spoke the words attributed to him, and, if he did, whether they proved that he knew the horse was vicious and so was liable. Maggi v. Cutts, 123 Mass. 535, 539, 540. No other point was argued.
Exceptions overruled.