49 Neb. 782 | Neb. | 1896
An opinion in this case was reported in 36 Neb., 131. Subsequently, upon being remanded, there was a verdict for the plaintiff in the district court of Douglas county in the sum of $3,000, upon which a judgment was duly rendered. The street railway company, by its petition in error, seeks a reversal of this judgment.
We have found in the record no question of importance other than that to which counsel have for the most part directed their attention, and that is whether or not the verdict was sustained by sufficient evidence. The railway company was charged in the petition with having furnished for use on one of its lines a horse of known vicious disposition, by which Elmer Leigh was, on September 5, 1889, kicked so severely that he died shortly afterward. There is no sufficient evidence to sustain this verdict, unless it appeared that a certain horse owned by the company was the one furnished Leigh to drive. The street railway at the time of the accident had two horses, each of which was known by the name of “Dude.” It is conceded that one of these, a very black animal, was ordi
Mr. Leverton was foreman of the barn of the company on Twenty-sixth and Lake streets, and testified, upon being called as a witness by the defendant in error, that the horse that kicked Mr. Leigh was called by the name of “Dude.” Daniel Martin, another witness for the defendant in error, then testified that he had been in the employ of the company and knew the horse called “Dude,” and that this horse was one that would kick while being driven, and that On account of his bad disposition it was usual to work this horse only when there was little travel on the streets. This witness described the horse to which he was referring as dark brown, and not coal black, though at some times of the year he would be called a black horse, and said that this horse was kept for three years at the barn of the company on Twenty-first and Cuming streets, from whence he was transferred to the Lake street barn. This witness further testified that he quit the service of the company in January of the year 1889, and that the above transfer was after that time, some time in the winter or fall. Frank Merritt, another witness of the defendant in error, testified that on September 5, 1889, he was working for the street railway company; that he remembered but one horse known by the name of “Dude” owned by the company; that said horse would kick if he got over the tug, or if whipped, and that this horse; during most of the six years that
It was clearly shown, and not contradicted, that the team Leigh was driving when he was injured had been kept at the Lake street barn, and not at the Cuming street barn. This fact illustrates the purpose of the evidence, which was directed toward proving that the vicious horse was taken from the Cuming street barn to the barn on Lake street before Leigh was hurt. While it is possible that this transfer might have been effected before September 5, 1889, it is quite as likely that it was after the
Reversed.