Frost v. Plumb

40 Conn. 111
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 40 Conn. 111 (Frost v. Plumb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Plumb, 40 Conn. 111 (Colo. 1873).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

The defendant hired a horse of the plaintiff to drive from Waterbury to Southington on Sunday. He drove, or permitted others to drive, the horse some ten miles beyond Southington. The weather was excessively hot, and it is- claimed that the extra distance, coupled with immoderate driving, caused the horse’s death. This action, trover and case joined, is brought to recover the value of the horse.

The court instructed the jury that if the owner of a horse knowingly lets him on the Lord’s Day, to be driven to a particular place, but not for any purpose of necessity or charity, and the hirer injures the horse by immoderate driving, in consequence of which he afterwards dies, the owner cannot maintain an action against the hirer for such injury, although it occurs while going to a different place, and beyond the limits specified in the contract.” The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff moved for a new trial. The Superior Court reserved the case for our advice.

The court in its charge was governed by the case of Gregg v. Wyman, 4 Cush., 322. In Maine and New Hampshire the doctrine of that case is repudiated, and the law is declared to he otherwise. Morton v. Gloster, 46 Maine, 420; Woodman v. Hubbard, 5 Foster, 67. In Whelden v. Chappel, 8 R. Isl., 230, the court followed Gregg v. Wyman. But in a late case, which has come to our knowledge since this case was decided, Hall v. Corcoran, 107 Mass., 251, Gregg v. Wyman is expressly overruled. In that case the defendants hired a horse and sleigh on Sunday to drive from South Adams to North Adams for pleasure, the plaintiff knowing the purpose for which the team was hired. After reaching North Adams they drove to Clarksbury, and on their return the horse and sleigh were [113]*113injured. Tlie court held unanimously, granting a new trial, that the defendants were liable. Mr. Justice Gray, in giving the opinion of the court, says: “ It therefore appears to ns to be clear, upon principle and authority, that an action of tort for the conversion of the horse by driving it beyond the place agreed in the illegal contract of letting and hiring, is not founded on that contract. And we think it is equally clear that that contract need not be shown by the plaintiff, and forms no part of his cause of action.” Thus it will he soon that the law oí Massachusetts on this subject is now in substantial harmony with the law of Maine and Mew Hampshire. We think that the law of this state ought to be, and is, the same. The charge of the court therefore, that the defendant was not liable, although the injury occurred in going to a different place, and beyond the limits specified in the contract, was clearly erroneous. Ye understand the rule to be this: — \ the plaintiff cannot recover whenever it is necessary for him', to prove, as a part of his cause of action, his own illegal ( contract, or other illegal transaction; but if he can show a' complete cause of action without being obliged to prove his own illegal act, although such illegal act may incidentally' appear, and may be important even as explanatory of oilier ,, facts in the case, he may recover. It is sufficient if his cause of action is not essentially founded upon something which is illegal. If it is, whatever may he the form of the action, he cannot recover. Apply that rule to this case. It was only necessary for the plaintiff to prove his own title to the property, and a conversion by the defendant. The destruction of the horse was a conversion; and proof that the injury which caused his death occurred while being driven without the consent of the owner, shows a complete cause of action without any reference to an illegal contract.

The illegal letting may or may not appear. If it does, itj simply explains the defendant’s possession, and proves that it ; was by the owner’s permission, at least for a certain purpose., : It may give the defendant an opportunity to injure the horse,, hut it does not cause the injury; nor does it contribute to it in such a sense as to make the plaintiff a party to the [114]*114('wrongful act. If it does not appear, before the defendant | can avail himself of it as a defence, it becomes necessary for ¡ him to prove the illegal contract to which he was a party, and j his own illegal conduct in traveling upon the Sabbath. But ! he can no more avail himself of that as a defence than the ‘plaintiff can as a cause of action. ' Either party, whose success depends upon proving his own violation of law, must fail.

As the charge to the jury was manifestly in conflict with these principles the Superior Court must be advised to grant a new trial.

Perhaps we might with propriety stop here. But there is another question involved in the case which may be important in another trial. It seems that the court excluded evidence of improper driving in going to, and beyond, the place specified in the contract. We have just seen that the defendant is clearly liable for the latter. It becomes an interesting inquiry how far he is liable for the former.

f In Way v. Foster, 1 Allen, 408, it was held that the defendant in a similar case was not liable, on the ground that the immoderate driving was virtually a breach of his contract. In Welch v. Wesson, 6 Gray, 505, it was held that the plaintiff might recover for an injury done to his property, while he and the defendant were engaged in trotting horses for money contrary to statute. The distinction between the two cases seems to be, that in the former there was a baihnent, and the misfeasance of the defendant was a breach of his duty as bailee; while in the latter, the act of the defendant in running the plaintiff down was a wrongful act, independent of any contract. It seems to us that the difference between the two cases is more apparent than real. No express contract was violated in either case. An implied contract therefore must be relied upon; and there seems to be quite as much reason for saying that the defendant in one case agreed to act fairly in the race, as that the defendant in the other agreed to drive the horse properly. Strictly speaking it was not a matter of actual agreement in either case. In each case the act of the defendant was a violation of a duty imposed by law; in the one, a duty of universal obliga[115]*115tion, to do liis neighbor no wrong; in the other, a specific duty imposed by the law of bailments.

If the usual test, whether the plaintiff can prove his cause of action without proving the unlawful agreement, he applied, are not the plaintiff’s chances quite as good in the case of a bailment as in the other case ? In one case the plaintiff proves that the defendant wrongfully injured his horse while the parties were driving side by side; in the other, the plaintiff proves that the defendant wrongfully injured his horse while driving him by his consent. If the circumstances of the race are unimportant, so the nature and character of the bailment are immaterial. In each case the tort, and not the | contract, is the gist of the action.

But a determination of the precise question decided In Way v. Foster is unnecessary in the present case. The immoderate driving during the bailment, of itself, or in connection with the improper driving after the bailment terminated, caused the death of the horse.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Conn. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-plumb-conn-1873.