Casey v. Sawyer Biscuit Co.

163 Ill. App. 145, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 411
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 4, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,809
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 Ill. App. 145 (Casey v. Sawyer Biscuit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casey v. Sawyer Biscuit Co., 163 Ill. App. 145, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 411 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit by appellant against appellee to recover damages for wrongfully, causing the death of appellant’s intestate, Albert Yonkers. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict finding appellant not guilty and judgment upon the verdict.

The declaration contains three counts. The. first count alleges that appellee kept a'mare in its stables, which mare was known to appellee, or might by the exercise of ordinary care have been known, to be vicious and dangerous; that the decedent, was employed by appellee as a hostler and appellee negligently failed to inform him of the vicious habits of said mare; that while the decedent was discharging his duties as a hostler and was using due care for his own safety, he was kicked by said mare and thereby so seriously injured that he died, etc. The second count alleges a duty on the part of appellee to provide a safe place in which the decedent could perform the duties of his employment with safety, and “to provide safe appliances and safe horses to be fed and cared for” by him) that appellee failed to perform said duties, but negligently used in its business a vicious and dangerous mare, which was known, or by reasonable diligence could have been known, to appellee to be a kicker, and negligently failed to inform the decedent of the vicious habits of said mare; that while the decedent in the line of his employment and in the exercise of due care for his own safety, and “while in ignorance of any danger in said stables ’ ’ was passing said mare, he was kicked by said mare and thereby so seriously injured that he died, etc. The third count alleges substantially the'same facts set forth in the first count, and further alleges a duty on the part of appellee to adopt measures to prevent the said mare from kicking persons, and to cease to use said mare in its wagons and in its business.

The only uncontroverted material facts in the record are that the mare in question belonged to appellee; that she was kept with other truck horses in the stable of appellee on Center avenue; that in the same stable appellee kept other horses known as “cracker wagon horses;” that one John Kuble was employed by appellee as “barn boss” under an arrangement whereby appellee allowed him a certain gross sum per week as wages for himself and the hostlers hired by him to work in the stable; that on June 28, 1907, while the decedent was employed in said stable as a hostler for the ‘ ‘ cracker wagon horses, ’ ’ he was kicked by said mare, and thereby so seriously injured that he died. The evidence bearing upon the other material issues in the case is in hopeless conflict. The testimony of the witnesses called on behalf of appellant tends to show that the mare was possessed of a most vicious disposition, which she habitually manifested by kicking whenever she was hitched or unhitched, or was approached in her stall, or was driven single or double, and that appellee had both constructive and actual notice of her said disposition and habits; that upon the occasion he was injured the decedent had only been employed in the stable three days, although he had been employed in the same stable as'a hostler on one or more previous occasions; that at the time the decedent was injured the mare had run into the stall before her bridle had been removed, and decedent said to one Culp, “You ought to take it off,” to which Culp replied, “I aint going to, you can take it off if you like; ’ ’ that decedent then took or attempted to take off the bridle, and while doing so was kicked.

The testimony of the witnesses called on behalf of appellee tends to show that the mare in question was quiet and easily handled; that at the time he was injured decedent had been in the employment of appellee for three weeks as a hostler caring for the “cracker wagon horses; ’ ’ that it was part of his duty to care for the truck horses; that the decedent had been employed in the same barn as a hostler on previous occasions; that upon the occasion in question the decedent while passing the stall in which the mare was kept, slapped her suddenly and without any warning upon her rump, whereupon she kicked him; that if he was kicked under the circumstances detailed by appellant’s witness, Culp, the decedent was a mere volunteer, as he was not expected or required to care for the truck horses. The cross-examination of the witness Culp discloses that upon a previous trial of the case he testified that when the decedent asked him why he did not take the bridle off the mare, he replied: “I know the horse, I drove him a day or so, he is liable to kick me. I wont take the chance. You can take it off if you wish.”

In this state of the proof the verdict was not unwarranted, and should not be set aside unless the record discloses errors of law, which were prejudicial to appellant.

It is urged that the court improperly permitted appellee to show that the mare was docile during the period subsequent to the time when the decedent was injured, and before she was sold by appellee. We are unable to find any such evidence in the record, but on the contrary the record discloses that the trial court ruled such evidence offered by appellee to be incompetent. It does appear that the mare was used by appellee subsequent to the time she kicked the decedent, and that when she was sold she was “heavy,” but admission of this evidence did not constitute the error complained of.

It is insisted that the court erred in excluding a statement alleged to have been made by Corcoran, a shipping clerk employed by the appellee, to McNamara, one of the drivers, who had been hired by Corcoran to drive a team, that he should be careful of the black mare, as she kicked. Corcoran, having apparent authority to hire the drivers, his alleged statement to Me-' Ñamara was competent and should have been admitted, but in view of the fact that the evidence, if admitted, would have been merely cumulative of much other like evidence introduced by appellant tending to show actual knowledge by appellee’s “barn boss” of the disposition of the mare to kick, we do not think appellant was injured by its exclusion. Upon that issue the jury evidently either did not believe the testimony of appellant’s witnesses, or in view of the other issues involved, did not consider it as controlling.

The court did not err in permitting appellee’s “barn boss,” Kuble, to give his opinion, as to the effect of suddenly slapping a horse on the back while standing in a stall. The witness had shown himself .to have had long experience in the care of horses, and the subject-matter of the inquiry was not necessarily one of common knowledge and experience.

During the trial counsel for appellee offered to show what amount of money it had paid to the widow of the decedent “for the burial,” etc. Notwithstanding an objection to the admission of such evidence was sustained by the court it is claimed that the mere offer was prejudicial to appellant. In view of the fact that the verdict of the jury absolved appellee from any liability we are unable to perceive how appellant could have been harmed by the offer, as he might have been if damages had been awarded which it was claimed were inadequate.

The twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth instructions, given at the instance of appellee, relate to the doctrine of assumed risk, and are substantially correct statements of the law upon that subject.

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Bluebook (online)
163 Ill. App. 145, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-sawyer-biscuit-co-illappct-1911.