131 Ky. 257 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
On. February 21, 1905, Fox & Logan delivered to the Southern Express Company at Done-rail, Ky., 16 horses to be carried to Memphis, Ten-n., in a car. Among the horses was one called Emily Letcher, valued at several thousand dollars. During the shipment the stall in which she was placed fell down, and she was seriously injured. They then brought this suit against the express company to recover $2,000, which they alleged was the amount she was damaged. Upon a trial of the case the jury found for the plaintiffs the amount sued for, and the defendant appeals.
The defendant, by the third paragraph of its answer, alleged that the shipper, before the contract of shipment was made, demanded to be advised of the rates to be charged for the carriage of the animals, and was thereupon offered by the defendant alternative rates proportioned' to the value of the animals; that the defendant offered to transport the animals for $254.50 if their value did not exceed $75 each, and informed the shipper that, if the animals were worth more than $75 each, an addition of 10 per cent of the excess valuation over $75 would be made; that the shipper, being asked to value the property for the purpose of enabling the defendant to fix the freight
The defendant asked the court to give the jury this instruction: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the injury to the mare, Emily Letcher, complained of was directly and proximately caused, not by a defect in the stalling, but by her becoming frightened and in consequence of such fright, kicking loose the stalls and other appliances, they should find for the defendant.” The court refused to give the instruction, and gave the jury these instructions:
“If the jury believe from the evidence that the stall in which the mare Emily Letcher was shipped, was defective in its material, or in its construction, or both, and that by reason of such defectiveness in construction or material, or both, said stall fell and by such falling caused said mare to be injured, the jury should find for the plaintiff, unless the jury believe from the evidence that said stall was caused to fall by reason of some unusually vicious or unruly propensity of said mare, and that but for such unruly or vicious propensity said stall would not have fallen.
“If the stall in which the mare, Emily Letcher, was shipped, was defective in its material or construction, hut was such a stall as was reasonably safe for the shipment of horses, yet the jury should find for the defendant if the jury believe from the evidence that said mare possessed some unusually vicious or unruly propensity, and that through said propensity said stall was caused to fall when but for such propensity said stall would not have fallen.”
If the stall was reasonably safe for the shipment of horses, the defendant is not responsible’ if the mare became frightened, and in consequence of such fright kicked loose the stall, and thus caused her injury. It was incumbent on the carrier to furnish a stall that
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
1. A stall is reasonably safe when it is such as a person of ordinary prudence would provide. The defendant may show,' by persons qualified to know, that the stall in question was put up in the usual and customary method of erecting stalls for the shipment 6f horses, and that it was reasonably safe for that purpose.'
2. The defendant offered to pove by J. W. Bondurant that, after the horses had been at Memphis some days, he met Benyon, who was then in charge of the horses, and Benyon then told him they were all right. It is insisted that this testimony of Bondurant was binding upon the plaintiffs as an admission, and was competent for this purpose as substantive evidence. In G-reenleaf on Evidence, séction 113, the rule is thus stated: “The party’s own admission, whenever made, may be given in evidence against him; but the admission or declaration of his agent binds him only when it is made during the continuance of the agency in regard to a transaction then depending, et dum fervet opus. It is because it is a verbal act, and part of the res gestae, that it is admissible at all, and therefore it is not necessary to call the agent himself to prove it; but, wherever what he did is admissible in evidence, then it is competent to prove what he said about the act while he was doing it, and it follows that, where his right to act in the particular matter in .question has ceased, the principal can no longer be affected by his declarations, they being' merely hearsay.”
The same rule has often been announced by this court. Thus, in Reed v. Brooks, 13 Ky. 127, the court
Benyon was an agent of the plaintiffs to ship the horses. What he said in shipping them is competent against the plaintiffs; but what he said in Memphis, after the horses reached their destination, is no more competent against the plaintiffs as substantive evidence than the declarations of a livery stable keeper would be to whose keeping the horses had been intrusted after they reached Memphis. In talking to Bondurant as to how the horses were, Benyon did not represent the plaintiffs, and what he said is only competent to contradict him as a witness.
3. For the same reason, the statement of McManus, offered to be proven by J. W. Gartrell, to the effect that Emily Letcher always gave him trouble, and that if she became unmanageable he would jump out of the car to get out of her way, if it was going 40 miles an
The opinion is extended as above indicated.