117 N.W. 857 | N.D. | 1908
The complaint in this case alleges that a certain mare, the property of the plaintiff, was intrusted to the defendant to pasture for hire during the season of 1906, and that while she was in the defendant’s possession, and under his control, and being so pastured for plaintiff, the defendant carelessly -and negligently permitted her to run into a wire fence in his corral, whereby she was injured, and made valueless, and prays damages therefor. The answer admits the pasturing, but denies any injury through the fault or negligence of the defendant, and pleads a counterclaim for the sum of $3, the agreed price for pasturing. The case was tried to a jury, and plaintiff, being called as a witness, testified as to the value of the mare, her soundness, that he saw her in July, and did not see her again until October; that when he saw her on the latter date her leg was badly injured by a cut received from a barbed wire. Pie offered no evidence showing how she was injured, but showed that she was killed by the defendant as a result of the injury, and testified as to some other unimportant details about the contract of pasturage. On this evidence plaintiff rested his case, and the defendant submitted a motion to direct a verdict in his favor on the ground that plaintiff had failed to establish the allegations of his complaint by showing that the mare was cut, permanently injured, and made valueless by reason of carelessness and negligence on
It is unnecessary to consider this further than to say that the motion was not' renewed after all the evidence of both parties was submitted, and, if the denial of the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was error, the defendant cannot avail himself of that fact without having renewed his motion after -all the evidence was in. This court has so held in so many cases that it is unnecessary to again cite them. The evidence shows that the defendant took some horses belonging to the plaintiff to pasture for the season, and that some three or four days before the accident to the mare described occurred the defendant built á barb-wire fence around a corral near his buildings. The corral was about eight rods long, and between it and the pasture was a lane. Between the lane and the corral a gate was hung. On the day referred to, another patron of the defendant came for some horses which he had in the pasture, and drove some of the horses through the lane to the corral. The defendant with other persons went into the corral to look .at the horses. It is not shown whether the defendant or some other person closed the gate between the corral and the lane, but it is shown that it was closed and left closed after the horses entered the corral with the knowledge of the defendant. The defendant and others were about the middle of the .corral with the ■horses in one end when the latter made a sudden .start, and ran around the corral. It was soon discovered that one of the legs of the mare in question was entangled in a barbed wire, but no one was able to testify whether it was a wire which had been left loose in constructing the fence, or whether she 'had been pushed into the fence by the other horses, or how tlie accident was caused.' Immediately upon discovering her condition, defendant notified plaintiff, who inspected and left her with the defendant. There is some disagreement as to their conversation on this occasion, but we do not deem either version material. As we view the evidence, it resolves itself into the question as to whether it was negligence on the part' of the defendant to permit .a number of horses, some of which, including the mare in question, were unbroken, to be driven into a corral newly fenced with barbed wire and the gate leading therefrom closed. The question of negligence in such a case is one of fact, and, unless the evidence is so clear that
Error is assigned because the court did not allow a question as to defendant’s reputation as a man of care in handling stock. It is conceded that the degree of care required by a depository for hire is ordinary care, and that ordinary care is such care or diligence .as persons of ordinary prudence usually exercise about their own affairs of ordinary importance. Revised Codes 1905, sections 5472, 6694; 3 Current Law, 162, note 68. We see no error in •excluding evidence as to his reputation in this respect. The facts relating to this ..accident were all before the jury, and i'n such a manner that their verdict must be based upon the facts of this case, :and, while the defendant’s reputation may have been, and' doubtless was, excellent in the matters referred to, yet, if he did not exercise ordinary care in this instance, his reputation for care could have no proper influence upon the deliberations of the jury. Lucia v. Meech, 68 Vt. 175, 34 Atl. 695.
Error is also assigned because the court excluded evidence as to custom regarding driving stock into this corral. It is unnecessary to determine whether this was properly excluded, because the question next preceding this had been answered, and it was in .substance the same, and to have allowed the question to which the ■objection was sustained would, in effect, have been allowing a repetition of the question just asked and answered.
The court in its charge to the jury stated that there were three ■degrees of care and three degrees of negligence, and proceeded to define each degree;" and error is assigned to such charge upon the ground and for the reason that it directly and and inferentially misstated the law applicable, and had a ■tendency to confuse and mislead the jury as to what ordinary care was, and also that the evidence showed no negligence whatsoever
The trial judge among other things, charged the jury as follows: “Now, then, gentlemen of the jury, in this case the burden of proof is upon McBride to establish that he placed his mare in Wallace’s, care as a depository for hire, that Wallace was a depository for hire, and, .further, that, when he placed the mare there, that she was sound and healthy and all right. And the burden of proof is also upon him to show that she has not been returned to him,, but that she was injured by the negligence of defendant so that on account of such injury she had to be killed as valueless. Now, then,, if McBride has shown these things by the fair preponderance of the evidence, then under the law Wallace should pay McBride for the damage thus done him. The burden of proof is upon McBride to establish by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the loss of ■this mare happened notwithstanding the exercise of ordinary care on Wallace’s part; and, unless the evidence in this case so makes, it appear to you, gentlemen of the jury, then Wallace would not be liable.” Error is assigned in that it misstates the law applicable,, and because the latter part of this instruction is confusing and unintelligible, and had a tendency to mislead and confuse the jury as to the burden of proof and tended to hold defendant as an absolute insurer, and for other reasons upon which we have already passed. The authorities regarding the burden of proof in this, class of cases cannot be harmonized. The English doctrine is that the -burden is upon the plaintiff throughout. Later authorities in this country seem to 'hold that, when the plaintiff has shown the delivery of the article, its sound condition, and that it has not been returned, the burden shifts to the defendant to show the facts-occasioning the loss, or that he used ordinary care in the protection of the property. Still other courts hold that much depends upon the circumstances, and whether conditions are such that the
It is urged by the appellant that the burden is upon the plaintiff throughout. We are not called upon to determine in this .case where the burden rests. The charge was delivered by the court orally. Had it been reduced to writing, the apparent conflict or ambiguity hereinafter referred to could not well have occurred. Tire defendant submitted no requests, .and failed to call the court’s attention to any point omitted by it in the charge. The first paragraph above referred to certainly states the rule as favorably to the defendant as he contends for, and follows those cases in harmony with the English doctrine. If it constitutes error, it was error in defendant’s favor, and furnishes him with no cause for complaint. On these points, see 2 Encyc. of Evidence, pages 189-294, inclusive, and cases cited; 3 Elliott on Evidence, sections 1784-1787, and cases cited; 3 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 750; Manson et al. v. Pullman Palace Car Porters’ Railway Employes Association (N. J. Sup.) 60 Atl. 1120.
The error assigned relating to the last portion of that part of the charge above quoted' furnishes a more difficult question. Error is not assigned by reason of the latter sentence being contradictory to any other part of the instructions. We have carefully considered the charge, taken as a whole; and, while the last sentence quoted may be somewhat ambiguous and confusing, yet we have concluded that it cannot have misled the jury. The court had clearly and emphatically told the jury that the burden was upon McBride throughout, and all other portions of the charge were in harmony with that theory. Taking the last sentence as it reads, it may have well been understood by the jury to have indicated that the burden was upon McBride to show that Wallace used more than ordinary care. • This construction would make this sentence far' more favorable to the defendant than he was entitled to have the law stated on any theory of the law of negligence, and we think that when read in connection with the whole charge, and in the light of the true spirit and tenor of the instructions as a whole, that the jury could not have understood the court to indicate that Wallace was liable if he used ordinary care. If we were not 'bound by the record before us, we should seriously question its correctness as to this sentence. Under this construction, the contradiction would be so slight and so in favor of the defendant that we do
Other errors in the charge are assigned, some of which are not argued. Others are covered by what we have already said, and still others are without merit. 'Some questions of practice are raised by respondent, but it is unnecessary to pass upon them in view of the conclusion at which we have arrived.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.