75 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries which resulted in the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Charles Manthey, received while attempting to stop a runaway horse belonging to the defendants.
It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff’s intestate, a blacksmith, upon the day of the accident was working at his trade near
It is well settled that failure to properly hitch or guard a horse in the streets of a populous city will justify a finding of negligence, and defendants’ act in this respect is admitted. (Norris v. Kohler, 41 N. Y. 42; Pearl v. Macaulay, 6 App. Div. 70.) The appellants, however, contend that the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence in rushing from a place of safety out upon the street to stop a runaway horse.
We do not think that such an act can be characterized as contributory negligence as matter of law. Such question is necessarily dependent upon the circumstances and conditions as they existed at the time when the act was performed. It appeared from the evidence that the neighborhood in question was a tenement house district, and many children living in that community were in the habit of playing upon the street. Across from the blacksmith shop was a kindergarten, attended by small children, having an exit on Thirteenth street. Near First avenue was a public school, and these schools were dismissed on Fridays between two-thirty and three o’clock in the afternoon. The accident happened at about three p. m. on a Friday. At the time of the runaway, between the blacksmith shop and Avenue A, east of the point of the accident, the street was more or less filled with children, who were crossing back and forth and playing in the street. A witness for the defendant testified that in view of the conditions he was apprehensive that the horse, if not stopped, would hurt children and other persons in the street, and at the time of the accident these children were engaged in an attempt
It is claimed that errors were committed in the charge in several particulars. The court charged that “ A person standing on the street, seeing a horse running away, has a right to try to stop that horse; and if he is injured, the negligent owner is liable for it. I charge you that as a matter of law.” It may be conceded, that this charge lays down an erroneous proposition of law, but it does riot follow for that reason that reversible error was committed, for the court continued, following the last quoted words, “ but whether this man, leaving his room or his workshop and rushing out and seizing the horse as he did, endeavoring to stop him, whether or not he was guilty of negligence, I am going to leave to you upon all the facts and circumstances of the case.” It is thus apparent that the court did not make this erroneous abstract statement • as the law applicable to the present case, but clearly charged them that the question of con-
Error is also claimed in the following refusal to charge : “ I take an exception to the qualification of the charge, and I wish to offer an additional charge; that upon the admitted facts of this case, as shown by the evidence, the plaintiff’s intestate, Charles Manthey, was guilty of contributory negligence, and cannot recover unless it is shown that the said Manthey attempted to stop the horse of the defendants, in an effort to save human life, or in an effort to save some person from being injured; and it must be shown that the said Manthey, at the time that he so attempted to stop said horse, knew that there was danger to some person.” We are unable to determine from an examination of the charge and of the request what qualification there was of the charge to which the exception referred. The court was requested to charge six different propositions, the third and fourth of which he refused to charge, and the others he charged without qualification. We do not know, therefore, what he did charge upon .this subject. The exception, therefore, is unavailing, and if the request which followed was correct, as applicable to the facts of the case, yet nevertheless the qualified charge, to which reference was made, might have fully protected the defendants’ rights, and, therefore, no error could be predicated of the refusal. But if we assume that the defendants were entitled to this charge, which we only do for present purposes, it was clearly cured by what followed. The defendants’ counsel immediately requested the following: “ Also that there is no evidence in the case that the said Charles Manthey attempted to stop defendants’ horse for. the purpose of preventing injury or the death of any person. The Court: I must leave to the jury what the motive or purpose was. Defendants’ counsel: And that there is no evidence in the case as to what the motive was, what the motive of said Manthey in attempting to stop said horse was. The Court: There
In the body of the charge, the court had already called attention to the facts connected with the acts of the deceased and the attitude of the defendants thereto. And in the several requests which were made he clearly left to the jury the motive and purpose which actuated the deceased in what he did and whether there was danger to other persons or children receiving injury "if the horse was not stopped. This left for the consideration of the jury substantially every question which the case presented, protected every right to which the defendant was entitled, and under the circumstances of the case, even though there was no pressing immediate danger of human life, or of serious injury to a person from the runaway horse, yet nevertheless it could not be said, as matter of law, that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in his endeavor to stop the horse. It is common knowledge that in a thickly populated .city there is always danger to life and property from a runaway animal, and those who endeavor to stop it even in the absence of any-immediate pending danger may not be charged with contributory negligence unless their act can be characterized as rash and reckless. If the act would have been done by a person exercising reasonable care and prudence, measured by the circumstances, then it is not negligence as matter of law, and a case is presented for the jury.
We find no error in this case which calls for a reversal. The judgment and order should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.