105 Ky. 247 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion oe the court.
G. W. and Virgil White kept a livery stable in Elizabeth-town, back of which was an inclosed lot in which they kept fowls, hogs, and other stock. In this lot they kept a dog chained to a post. The plaintiff, Wooldridge, desiring to look at an animal in the lot which the defendants had for sale, they sent an employe to show it to him. After' seeing it, he, in company with the employe, started to return to the stable, and in doing so they passed between the post to which the dog was chained and a pond, the space between which being about fifteen! feet. Just as they passed the dog (the employe being between the plaintiff and the dog), it jumped at and bit the plaintiff, resulting in his injury. There is testimony tending to show that the plaintiff was advised that the dog was vicious as he passed into the lot. The defendant contends that the plaintiff unnecessarily and voluntarily went within reach of the dog and was bitten by it; and it is further contended that he
We held in the case of Bush v. Wathen (recently decided) [47 S. W., 599], that although the person injured was_ not upon the premises of the owner after night, or engaged in some unlawful act in the day-time, when injured, still, if he teased the dog and thus caused it to bite Mm, an action could not be maintained to recover damages resulting from an injury thus inflicted.
The defendant in this case seeks to avoid a recovery because the plaintiff was aware of the vicious character of the dog and the danger which attended the act of getting within its reach, and consequently recklessly and negligently placed himself where he received the injury. If a dog is chained under the circumstances detailed, and known by a party to be vicious, and he voluntarily and knowingly goes within its reach, he ought not to be permitted to recover from its owner or person having control of it. A party might. be acquainted with the vicious character of a dog, but still not know the length ©f its chain, and ignorantly place himself in a position where it could bite him, and the defendant ought not-to escape liability by reason of such act of the plaintiff. The plaintiff was being conducted through the lot by the
The court below in its instruction assumed the law to be that if the plaintiff was made acquainted with the fact that the dog w.as vicious, and he negligently or recklessly placed himself in a position where it could bite him he was not entitled to recover. The court should have qualified the instruction given by telling the jury that if the plaintiff’s position, at the time he was bitten by the dog, was such as might have been assumed by a person of ordinary sense and prudence, he was entitled to recover of the defendants the damage sustained. It does not necessarily follow, because the plaintiff was in reach of the dog, that he was reckless or negligent. He may not have known the length of the chain, or miscalculated the distance he was from the dog, or assumed it was safe to pass by it in company with the employe of the defendants. A man of ordinary sense and prudence might have thought it safe to pass the dog as did plaintiff. Under such circumstances, the defendants can not escape liability for the injury inflicted by the dog.
More than three days had elapsed from the rendition of the verdict before the plaintiff filed his additional grounds for a new trial, one of which was misconduct of the jury and of the defendants. With these grounds there was filed an affidavit in which it is stated that at a noon recess of the court on a day during the trial, after part of the evidence was heard in the case, and before the verdict was returned, Reuben Shivley, one of the witnesses for thedef end-ants, and a brother-in-law of one of them, pointed out to some of the jurors where the dog was chained when it bit the plaintiff, and detailed to them the route he took in pass-'' ing through the lot'in going to see the animal, and the one
We think this conduct of the jurors and one of the defendants entitled the plaintiff to a new trial.
As said in Luttrell v. Maysville & Lexington Railroad Co., 18 B. Mon., 295: “The safest rule, therefore, to adopt in such, cases, is to consider the misconduct of the jury as a sufficient ground for a new trial, where the party complaining of it has not connived at nor been instrumental in any manner in producing it.”
We think the additional grounds for a new trial sufficiently specific. The affidavit which accompanied the motion fully apprised the court as to what the misconduct was upon which the plaintiff relied upon a motion for a new trial.
It was held in Houston v. Kidwell, 83 Ky., 301, that, where grounds have been filed and motion made for a new trial within three days after the verdict, the court may, after the expiration of three days, permit additional grounds to be filed,, if in its opinion the additional grounds should be considered before the motion is disposed of. This rule was not changed by Kentucky Central R. R. v. Smith, 93 Ky., 449, [20 S. W., 392], as the court held that additional grounds for a new trial can not be filed after the motion for a new trial has been made and overruled. There is no conflict in these cases. The judgment is reversed, for proceedings consistent with this opinion.