238 Pa. 443 | Pa. | 1913
Opinion by
The plaintiff sought in this action to recover for the loss of two horses which were killed under the following circumstances. The horses had been in the care and custody of the owner’s servant, who was leading them at night time through a public street in the City of Pittsburgh, on the way to the stable where usually kept. The evidence shows clearly that, either through the negligence of the servant, or because of unexplained fright, they escaped from the control of the servant and ran in the direction in which they were being led, but too far for their own safety. In continuing straight on after a certain point had been reached, they were not following the route on which they would have been led, but one which ended a short distance beyond on the bank
The judgment is reversed.