56 Vt. 700 | Vt. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is settled law in this State, that the statutes in respect to fences between occupied lands, do not relieve the owners of cattle from the common law duty of restraining them from straying on to the premises of others. Keenan v. Cavanaugh, 44 Vt. 268. The defence is not put on the ground of neglect of the plaintiff as to his fence, but that .the defendant Marshall A. Moore is not liable under the declaration for the damage done by the cows belonging to his father.
He was the lessee of his father’s farm at the halves, and had the management and control of it. The fences and stock were solely in his charge. In an action against him for trespasses of the stock, which he had on the farm, the question of' actual own
We think it would be no improper construction of the report to hold that Marshall A.’s bailment of his father’s cows was something more than that of a mere agistor. But as an agister only, he had such qualified ownership as to make him liable; therefore, he could have been sued alone, and would have been liable to the extent found by the County Court.
“Where in point of fact and of law several persons might have been jointly guilty of the same offense, the joinder of more persons than were liable, in a personal or mixed action in form ex-delicto, constitutes .no objection to a partial recovery, and one of them may bo acquitted, and a verdict taken against the others.” 1 Chit. PL (12 Am. ed.) p. 86, and cases there cited j Wright v. Cooper, 1 Tyler, 425.
The defendant, Marshall A., claims that this principle does not apply, because, as he says, without producing it, the declaration charged a joint ownership of the cows, whereas the referee reports that the defendant Ephraim owned throe of them, and Marshall A., one; and ho cites Adams v. Hall et al. 2 Vt. 9, which was a dog and sheep case. But there neither defendant was under obligation to keep the other’s dog from killing sheep; therefore neither became liable for the injury done by the other’s dog. Neither was in the possession or use of the dog of the other. Here Marshall A. being in the possession, control, and use of all the cows, was bound to take care of them, and is liable, as before shown, for the damage of all,irrespective of Ephraim’sinterest or liability. But if there was a variance between the declaration and proof as
We think there was no error in holding Marshall A. chargeable, and no exception was taken to the judgment in favor of the defendant Ephraim.
Judgment affirmed.