Hope v. Valente

85 A. 541, 86 Conn. 301, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 85 A. 541 (Hope v. Valente) 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
Hope v. Valente, 85 A. 541, 86 Conn. 301, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 89 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

The plaintiff alleges that he was kicked by a horse of the defendant which had been “negligently left unattended, unguarded and unharnessed and tied to the rear of a wagon” in Orange Street. He claimed further that the horse was a vicious, kicking horse, and that the defendant knew of this vice. The complaint has been construed as charging two acts of negligence. Hope v. Valente, 84 Conn. 248, 250, 79 Atl. 583. There was evidence tending to prove that the defendant was engaged in constructing two houses on Orange Street, that at the time of the plaintiff’s injury there were several piles of brick, about four feet high, in the street on the grass plat between the sidewalk and the curbstone, and that there were heaps of sand, broken bricks and pieces of lumber blocking the sidewalk in front of the premises. In the gutter of the street about in front of the premises stood the defendant’s wagon with a horse hitched thereto, and to the rear of this wagon was a chestnut mare belonging to the defendant, unharnessed and tied by a halter to the rear of the wagon from which she was feeding. The plaintiff claimed that in passing along the street he turned from the obstructed sidewalk into the street proper, that having passed at the rear of the chestnut mare he turned to pass parallel with her at a distance of about ten feet, when she swung around and kicked him.

The defendant assigns as error the court’s instruction that if the jury found it proven that the defendant’s horse “was left by him unattended, unguarded and *304 unharnessed,” and tied to his wagon, at the time and place in question, they should then determine “whether, in so doing, he was negligent,” that is, “whether . . . he acted as a reasonably prudent . . . man would have acted under like circumstances,” and that if they found that the defendant so left the horse, and was in so doing negligent, and the plaintiff, without negligence on his part, was kicked by her, he might recover. This plainly left it for the jury to determine whether it was negligence to leave the horse tied to the wagon in the street, although she was gentle and free from vicious habits. This is the precise ground of the defendant’s complaint of the instruction. It is said that as the horse is a domestic animal not naturally vicious or inclined to mischief, an owner is not negligent in leaving it tied in the street unless the individual horse so left is vicious and the owner knows it. But a person may be negligent in the use of an instrument which in itself is entirely harmless. We have said in thé case of a runaway horse that it was a question for the jury whether it was negligence to leave the horse unhitched in the street under circumstances disclosed by the evidence, regardless of its habit of running away. Haywood v. Hamm, 77 Conn. 168, 160, 58 Atl. 695. Under the plaintiff’s claim in the present case the defendant was not using the street for the purpose of travel, for which it was provided. The horse was not under the restraint which it would have been if attached in the ordinary manner to a vehicle. It was unharnessed. It was feeding, which might or might not render it impatient of strangers in its vicinity. It was tied to the wagon so that it could not escape if startled at its feeding by the approach of passersby. The sidewalk was obstructed so that travel might thereby be diverted to the traveled part of the street in the vicinity of the horse. Under the facts claimed to have been proved it was proper *305 to leave it to the jury to determine whether, regardless of the viciousness of the defendant’s horse, he was negligent in leaving it in the street in the manner claimed.

Upon the question of the defendant’s knowledge cf the vicious propensities of his horse the jury were instructed that “the knowledge of any servant or agent.... in respect to any vicious propensity or disposition of the horse in question, acquired while driving or having the management, care or control of said horse, by the direction or authority of the defendant, will be imputed to the defendant.” This is excepted to by the defendant as permitting the knowledge of any one having the management, care or control of the horse to be.imputed to the defendant. This criticism does not take notice of the fact that the charge confines the knowledge to “any servant or agent of the defendant.” The jury were later told that this knowledge must have been acquired by the servant or agent while acting within the fair scope of his agency or employment. It is conceded by the defendant’s counsel in their brief that this charge could not be complained of had the court defined what constituted “acting within the scope ” of their authority. But in this respect the charge followed the ninth request of the defendant and the court was not required to go further than the defendant requested.

The first thirty-three assignments of error relate to the admission of the testimony of O’May, a witness for the plaintiff, who was a groom at the stable of a veterinary, and testified in substance that a chestnut mare, which was brought to the stable and treated there and taken away a short time before the plaintiff’s injury, was a vicious kicking animal, that he informed the servant who came for her that she was a kicker. He testified also that he had afterward seen the same piare in the defendant’s possession and in the possession *306 of one Dominic Manturio, a servant of the defendant, and had also seen her in front of the Orange Street premises. It is claimed that this evidence, tending to show viciousness, was not admissible until the identity of the horse at the stable with the one which did the plaintiff injury had been established, and that the question of identity was one for the court. We said, when this case was formerly before us (84 Conn. 248, 254, 79 Atl. 583), that this evidence should have been excluded until the identity of the horse had been shown; and we said that other evidence to the same point should have been admitted because the identity was so clearly shown by it. Without some testimony tending to show that the horse at the stable was the one which injured the plaintiff, the evidence of its viciousness was irrelevant and immaterial. Whether a proper foundation for admitting this evidence had been laid was a preliminary question for the trial judge; but whether the identity was fully established was a question for the jury upon all the evidence in the case, and they were so told in the charge, and instructed that if it was not the same horse O’May’s testimony was to be disregarded. The finding shows that at the time the testimony was admitted there was evidence tending to prove that the horse which O’May cared for and testified was vicious was the horse which injured the plaintiff and was the defendant’s horse. This was sufficient to justify the court in admitting the testimony.

It is also objected to this testimony that that portion of it was improper which tended to show that information of the viciousness of the horse was communicated by O’May to the servant of the defendant who came to the hospital for the horse, because such knowledge could not be imputed to the master unless the servant is shown to have had general charge of the horse. It does not appear that the testimony was objected *307 to upon this ground at the time it was admitted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 541, 86 Conn. 301, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-valente-conn-1912.