Bethea v. Taylor

3 Stew. 482
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 Stew. 482 (Bethea v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bethea v. Taylor, 3 Stew. 482 (Ala. 1831).

Opinion

By JUDGE CRENSHAW.

In this court, the plaintiff in error contends, that the setting of the gun within his enclosure, for the purpose expressed in the bill of exceptions, was a lawful act, and did not amount to culpable negligence on his part; and that, if he was blamable in this, yet the act of the negro, in bringing and tying the horse within the defendant’s enclosure, if not unlawful, was a negligence, equally culpable; and that, the injury being the result of the concurrent negligence of both parties, the defendant cannot be made liable.

If the first branch of this proposition be true — if the defendant did no more than what he might lawfully do — then, it is evident, that he cannot be liable for the plaintiff’s loss.— But I hold, that if not unlawful, it was, at least, a negligent act of the defendant, to set his gun within his enclosure,' around which the fence was only two or three feet high, and into which the cattle, and other stock of his neighbors, running at large, in the woods, might lawfully enter at pleasure. If his fence had been lawful, he would then be blameless.

The second branch of the proposition involves the inquiry, whether the plaintiff was or was not, either by himself or his servants, guilty of negligence, and without which, in all probability, the injury would not have happened. In all rwohn-[484]*484bility, if the negro had not carried the horse, and tied him within the defendant’s enclosure, he would not have been shot. Neither law nor policy, will permit a slave, in the night, and without his master’s knowledge pr consent, to ride his horse to a negro quarter, where there is no overseer, and where the owner resides at some distance. It-may be the misfortune of -the master to own such a slave; but the master is not entirely blameless, in suffering his slave to depart so far from the ordinary rules of obedience, as secretly to take away his property, at night, and subject it to the hazard of destruction. It was an unlawful trespass, in the negro, to ride the horse into the .defendant’s enclosure, and to visit his negro quarter, without permission. It was the duty of the master, to have kept his horse and his negro at home; arid, under the circumstances, the defendant was not bound to use even ordinary precaution: and, if the horse was injured, or destroyed, it must be imputed, as much to the negligence of the.plaintiff, and the improper .conduct of his slave, as to that of the defendant. And, if so, the defendant was not liable, and the charge was erroneous.

To this effect, is the law, as stated in the case of Butterfield v. Forrester;

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Bluebook (online)
3 Stew. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bethea-v-taylor-ala-1831.