127 A. 380 | Vt. | 1925
The defendant's stallion escaped from his stable and ran down the road to the Woodcock place, the next farm to the south. He was there discovered by Floyd Woodcock, trying to get through the fence into the pasture where the Woodcock horse was. Almon Woodcock, the father of Floyd, was then at work in the garden on the other side of the house. Floyd called to him to come and help drive the stallion back home. He responded to the call, stepping into the barn and getting a pitchfork as he came, and the two men turned the stallion and started him back up the road towards home. This done, Almon turned and went back towards the house. Floyd remained in the road watching the stallion, which ran up the road a way, and after trying there to get through the fence into the pasture, he whirled and ran wildly down the road again. *288 Floyd swung at him a halter he was carrying and tried to head him off, but he dashed past and overtaking Almon Woodcock, who was then in the driveway to the barn and outside the traveled part of the highway, ran against and over him, inflicting injuries from which he died.
This suit is a tort action brought under G.L. 6698, which penalizes one who "wilfully or negligently" permits a stallion over a year old to run at large, and makes such person liable for the damage done by such stallion when so running at large. There is no claim here that the defendant wilfully allowed this horse to go at large, so he is not liable unless the horse escaped through his negligence.
One thing that made it possible for the horse to escape was the breaking of the spring of the snap on the headstall of the halter by which he was hitched. When this broke, the horse slipped off the halter in some way, and, there being nothing to prevent, he backed out of the open stall in which he stood, and passed out into the highway through the open door of the stable. The defendant's evidence tended to show that this spring broke on account of a latent defect therein, and for the purposes of this discussion it will be taken that such is the fact.
The only exceptions relied upon are (1) those relating to the refusal to direct a verdict, (2) those relating to the refusal to charge as requested, and (3) one relating to the exclusion of a plan drawn by Floyd Woodcock. Of these only the first and last are for consideration. All of those included in the second group (except as hereinafter stated) were, by a rule frequently announced, too general to be available. McAllister v. Benjamin,
The motion for a verdict was predicated upon the following grounds: That the proximate cause of the accident was a latent defect in the halter snap; that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence; that the defendant's negligence, if any, was not the proximate cause of the accident; and that no pecuniary damage had been shown. The defendant also attempted to raise the question of latent defect by an exception to the court's refusal to charge as requested; this exception, however, is challenged on the ground that it was not properly saved, in that it was not noted by the court. But inasmuch as the same point was raised under the motion, we say nothing as to this claim. *289
The motion was properly overruled. It may well be that the breaking of the spring could not be made the basis of a recovery here; but there were other features of the case made by the evidence which were for the consideration of the jury on the question of liability. It is familiar law that there may be more than one proximate cause in a case of this character. Spinney'sAdmx. v. Hooker,
So the one fact that the defendant was not responsible for the failure of the snap to function is not determinative of the case; for where two or more proximate and efficient causes combine to produce an injury, a recovery may be had if the defendant is responsible for any one of them, though he is not responsible for the others. This is the rule that was applied in Blanchard v.Shade Roller Co.,
Nor assuming that the case comes within the rule laid down inKilpatrick v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co.,
Some suggestion is made in the brief that Floyd Woodcock was guilty of contributory negligence. But this was not made a basis for the motion, so we take no time with the claim.
That the law regards the proximate rather than the remote cause of an injury is axiomatic. In the practical application of this rule, however, delicate and difficult distinctions necessarily arise. This results from the ever-variant character of the circumstances attending accidental injuries. So it is that no ultimate test has been or ever can be formulated that will solve the question in every case. The determination of what is a proximate and what a remote cause is more a matter of analysis and synthesis than of definition. Mayor v. Foltz,
So when it was established to the satisfaction of the jury that this horse went at large through the defendant's negligence, the question arose, was the decedent's injury a natural sequence of that negligence? It was for the jury to answer that question, unless the acts of the Woodcocks, father and son, amounted to an intervening cause within the meaning of the law. Had this horse injured someone on his way down to the Woodcock farm, no question could be made as to the defendant's negligence being a proximate cause. The case would then be in principle like Barnes v. Chapin,
4 Allen 444, 81 A.D. 710. *291
Nor could there be any doubt on the question of proximate cause, if the horse had succeeded in getting into the pasture and had injured the Woodcock horse. The case would then be like Lea v.Riley, 34 L.J. (N.S.) C.P. 212. For in tracing the natural sequence of the consequences of a negligent act when applied to living forces like horses, regard is to be had to the fact that they will probably act in conformity to their natural instincts.Stevens v. Dudley,
The last ground of the motion was also unavailing. It is true that in actions brought solely for the recovery provided for in G.L. 3314, nominal damages cannot be recovered. It was so held inLazelle v. Newfane,
Conscious suffering is shown by the transcript, but there being no count in the complaint seeking a recovery in the right of the decedent (though there might have been, Ranney v. St. J. L.C.R.Co.,
Besides, damages in these cases are peculiarly for the jury. In the very nature of things, they are much more a matter of judgment than computation. No two lives are of the same value to their families and kinsmen, and in each case the damages are to be assessed according to the circumstances disclosed. The age, health, and habits of industry of the decedent; his skill, thrift, and capacity for business; his earnings, property, and probable duration of life; his habits, generosity, and disposition toward those for whose benefit suit is brought, are *293
among the considerations to be taken account of. These proved, it becomes a matter for the judgment and discretion of the jury.Pittsburgh, etc., R.R. Co. v. Burton,
During the cross-examination of Floyd Woodcock, at the defendant's request, he made a sketch of the premises where this accident happened, and when this was offered in evidence by the defendant it was excluded. The plaintiff says that the defendant did not save an exception to this ruling; but if he did, it is unavailing. The matter was within the court's discretion and no error appears. Hassam v. Safford Lumber Co.,
Judgment affirmed.