63 N.Y.S. 181 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
At the time of the transactions involved in this suit the defendant was a minor. About the middle of June, 1898, he went to the plaintiffs livery stable at Spring Valley, in Rockland county, and ordered a team with which to go to Haverstraw on the third of July following. He told the plaintiff’s agent in charge of the stable that he wanted to drive to Haverstraw and “ cut a swell ” there, and the agent swore that he let him the horses for that purpose. The arrangement was that the team should be delivered at the defendant’s house in the village of Monsey, on July 3, 1898, at half-past twelve o’clock in the afternoon. .
The team was brought to the defendant’s residence at Monsey at the time specified by the plaintiff’s agent, who then asked the defendant where he intended driving. According to the testimony of this witness, the defendant responded: “I am going direct to Haverstraw, put the team in, have them fed and cared for, and return home in the evening.” The witness responded: “ You need not hurry to get home ; if you are detained by your friends longer than you expect, come home at 10 o’clock, and later if necessary, but don’t injure the team.”
Accompanied by a friend the defendant drove the team to Haverstraw, by way of Nanuet and the Short Clove, which is a somewhat longer route than another road which he might have taken. The
Although the complaint alleges and the answer admits that the contract of hiring was entered into on or about the 2d day of July, 1898, the testimony on both sides shows that a complete agreement in respect to the letting of the team was made about two weeks earlier. That agreement did not bind the defendant to drive to Haverstraw by the shortest route. It left him at liberty to pursue any usually traveled road which people were accustomed to take who desired to go from Mousey to Haverstraw. The voluntary statement on his part, when the team was brought to his residence on the third of July, that he proposed to go direct to Haverstraw, did not, under the circumstances, in my opinion, become a binding part of the contract of hiring; but, if I am wrong in this, I am nevertheless of opinion that the use of the word direct did not necessarily imply an engagement to go by the very shortest way. It should be regarded as signifying merely the defendant’s intention to proceed by some usual and expeditious route, without diverging from it. In this view, it becomes immaterial whether the contract was to drive direct to Haverstraw, or merely to drive to Haverstraw. In neither aspect of the case does the evidence establish any substantial departure from the terms of the contract. The doctrine that a person who hires a horse for a specified journey is liable for conversion if he drives the horse further than the stipulated journey, or on another and different trip, cannot be pressed so far as to make the hirer chargeable as for a tort, merely by reason of slight and immaterial departures from the general course of the direction outlined in the contract. This qualification of the doctrine was recognized by the learned trial judge, who properly charged the
But- in my opinion the defendant was entitled to a dismissal at the close- of the evidence on both sides, and the case should not have been submitted to the jury at all. The rule applicable to the case cannot be better stated than it is in the language of Chancellor . Kent in Campbell v. Stakes (2 Wend. 137), where he says: “ The contract of an infant is not void, but is voidable at the election of the infant. If a horse is let to him to go a journey, there is an implied promise that he will make use of ordinary care and diligence to protect the animal from injury, and return him at the time agreed upon. A bare neglect to do either would not subject him or an adult to an action of trespass, the contract remaining in full force. But if the infant does any wilful and positive act, which. amounts to an election on his part to disaffirm the contract, the owner is entitled to the immediate possession. If he wilfully and intentionally injures the animal, an action of trespass lies against him for the tort.” (See, also, Moore v. Eastman, 1 Hun, 578, and cases there cited.) It is essential, to hold an infant for trespass in a suit like this, to show that the injury to the horse was willful and intentional. A mere lack of moderation in driving and a failure to observe due care, where there is no willful and intentional injury, will not suffice to render an infant liable. As Chief Justice Cooley says : “If case be brought against an infant for the immoderate use and want of care of a horse which has been bailed to him, infancy is a good defense; the gravamen of the complaint being merely a breach of the implied contract of bailment.” (Cooley Torts [2d ed.], 123.)
There is no evidence in the present case sufficient to warrant a finding that the injuries which the plaiuliff’s team sustained were intentionally inflicted by the defendant. On the contrary, it is tolerably plain that the death of one of the horses and the sickness of the other were simply due to the fact that they were driven a long distance during the hottest portion of an exceptionally hot day in midsummer. The only testimony tending to show that there had been a material departure from the terms of the contract by driving to Nyack instead of to Plaverstraw was furnished by the alleged
Note.— The rest of the cases of this term will be found in the next volume, 49 App. Div.— [Rep.
I think it is clear that whatever liability can be predicated upon the defendant’s management of the plaintiff’s team arises out of contract instead of tort, and to this liability his infancy constituted a complete defense.
I am, therefore, in favor of reversing the judgment.
All concurred, except Hirschberg, J., absent.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.