83 Mo. 678 | Mo. | 1884
This case is before ns on defendant’s appeal from a judgment rendered for plaintiff by the circuit court of Clark county for the alleged killing by defendant of three of plaintiff’s horses, and crippling a fourth one.
We are asked to reverse the judgment on the ground
In this case it is admitted that defendant’s road, though passing through an enclosed field, was not fenced where the horses of plaintiff went on the track, and plaintiff’s evidence shows that after entering on the track they were tracked from that point to within about twenty-three feet of the east end of the railroad bridge built across a pond of water, where the tracks ceased; that .one of the horses was found dead near the embankment near the east end of the bridge and two others, one being a colt, were found dead in the pond of water by the side of and under the bridge; that from a point twenty-three feet east of the bridge that the ground was torn up as if something had been dragged over it; that there was hair and blood on the track from this point out to twenty-eight and óne-half feet on the bridge where the ties were pried apart and horses put through and that there was blood and hair there ; that the horses were badly mutilated, ribs protruding, flesh torn open, entrails sticking out, and one horse’s leg torn off and one of them split on his back from his fore shoulders to his tail. These facts were testified to by four or five. witnesses, and under the ruling of this court in the case of Blewett v. Railroad Co., 72 Mo. 583, made out a prima
It is, however, insisted by appellant’s counsel that ■ this prima facie case was entirely overcome by the evidence of Howard and Sherrod, one of whom was the engineer and the other the fireman, who testified that they were running the engine, and that when they first, saw the horses on the track they were about forty yards ahead of the engine; that the whistle was blown, and the engine reversed; that the horses ran up the track and jumped into the bridge; that one of them, after struggling on the bridge, jumped off into the water and swam out towards the fence east of the end of the bridge; that they ran the engine slowly up to the bridge ; that they dumped the colt over the side of the bridge into the water and put a log chain around the hind legs of the other horse, hitched the engine to it, and pulled it back about the length of the horse where the ties were wide apart and put it through. Both witnesses testified that none of the horses were struck by the engine.
The plaintiff, in rebuttal, introduced witnesses who stated that the water in the pond was shallow, not over knee deep; that there was neither blood nor hair on the ties, except one west of where the ties were spread apart, and no appearance of a horse having been dragged on the bridge west of the place where the ties were spread apart.
It is claimed by counsel that inasmuch as two witnesses swore positively to the fact that the engine did not strike or come in contact with the horses, but that they jumped onto the bridge and killed themselves, and inasmuch as the verdict of the jury was against this direct evidence, that, therefore, the judgment should be reversed. In upholding this claim we would, in effect,
We are not prepared to do this in view of what has been ruled by this court in the case of McAfee v. Ryan, 11 Mo. 365, where it is said: “The only question of fact submitted .to the jury was the promise of Mrs. Ryan. On this point, only one witness testified, and the verdict was certainly against his evidence, but we are not authorized for this reason only to disturb it. * * * As the counsel thought proper to submit a single question to them, and the court distinctly stated the point in the instructions given, and there was but a single witness on the point, the fair inference from the verdict and the refusal of the court to set it aside is, that neither the jury nor the court credited the witness. There is actually nothing on the record to indicate any cause for distrusting the veracity of the witness, but there may have been something in his conduct before, the jury or in the relations he bore to the parties, which cannot appear to us.” So in the case of Steamboat v. Matthews, 28 Mo. 248, it is said: “All the testimony was on one side, but the jury disregarded it, and the circuit court, who heard the witnesses, sanctioned the verdict of the jury. ' We must infer from this that the circuit court was satisfied with the course of the jury.