Tabor School Camp, Inc. v. Norfolk Hunt Club

30 Mass. App. Dec. 129
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 1, 1964
DocketNo. 49968
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Mass. App. Dec. 129 (Tabor School Camp, Inc. v. Norfolk Hunt Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tabor School Camp, Inc. v. Norfolk Hunt Club, 30 Mass. App. Dec. 129 (Mass. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Murphy, J.

This is an action of tort to recover the value of a horse known as “Rise-N Shine,” belonging to the plaintiff which it says the [130]*130defendant converted to its own use. The answer is a general denial.

At the trial there was evidence to show that the plaintiff owned a summer riding camp for girls and maintained horses for that purpose; one of the horses owned by it in 1962 was called “Rise-N Shine.” The plaintiff and defendant agreed the defendant might lease the horse “Rise-N Shine” for use as a drag pony during the off season.

The function of a drag pony is to serve as mount for a rider who drags a scented bag over a course for hounds to follow in the sport of draghunting. A drag pony sometimes must jump. The draghunting season is autumn, ending in mid-December or earlier, and lasts for about a month in the spring. These facts were known to Mr. Browder. Mr. Clark gave Mr. Browder to understand that the horse would be kept during the draghunting season at the Norfolk Hunt Stable. This is a boarding stable not operated by the Norfolk Hunt Club.

The agreement was signed by William H. Potter, Jr., Treasurer for the defendant. The body of this agreement is a mimeographed form, prepared by the plaintiff and regularly used by it in the leasing of its horses.

The horse was delivered about September 1, and was placed in the Norfolk Hunt Stable where it remained until December, 1962, when the defendant transferred it to the riding stable of Dana Hall School. The [131]*131defendant did not inform the plaintiff of such transfer.

Dana Hall School is a school for girls, having a riding department with a well equipped stable and an indoor ring for winter riding. The riding department and stable is under the direction of Captain Fred Mars-man, an experienced professional who has for many years directed riding at Dana Hall in the winter and at a large riding camp for girls in the summer. The understanding between the defendant and Dana Hall School, as represented by Captain Marsman, was that the School should care for and board the horse and might use the horse for riding by its pupils, paying no cash consideration, and should return the horse in time for the commencement of the defendant’s draghunting season in April, 1963. While at the Dana Hall Stable the horse received excellent care and was ridden by pupils under Captain Marsman’s supervision.

The horse put on weight and appeared to be in excellent health through March 4, 1963. On the morning of March 5 it was found to be ill and a veterinary was immediately called and treated it. The horse died that afternoon. An autopsy was performed and the cause of death diagnosed as a disease called “Colitis X”. On March 5 or. 6 the defendant informed Mr. Browder of the death of the horse, who then learned for the first time that it had been at Dana Hall School.

[132]*132The court made the following special findings:

“The plaintiff caused to be delivered to the defendant its horse “Rise-N Shine” on or about September i, 1962 under a contract of bailment for hire. Without the plaintiff’s consent or knowledge the defendant delivered said horse to Dana Hall School in December 1962. While the horse was at Dana Hall School it was used for riding. The horse died at said school on or about March 5, 1963. The delivery of the horse to Dana Hall School was not authorized by the plaintiff.”

The court held the defendant to be liable for the conversion of the horse, found for the plaintiff, and assessed damages in the sum of $3,000.00 with interest from the date of the writ.

At the close of the evidence, the defendant filed the following requests for rulings:

“1. The defendant is not liable to the plaintiff under the declaration in this case by reason of its failure to return the horse due to the death thereof unless the defendant substantially violated the terms of the lease of the horse.

2. The defendant as a lessee of the horse had a right to keep and use it, or to cause it to be kept and used, in any proper way, at any proper place, and by any proper person during the term [133]*133of the lease, unless otherwise agreed expressly or by clear implication.

3. There was no agreement, express or implied, between the parties limiting the defendant’s right as lessee to keep and use the horse or to cause it to be kept and used, in any proper way, at any proper place, and by any proper person during the term of the lease.

4. It was not a violation of the conditions of the lease of the horse to cause it to be kept at the riding school of Dana Hall School and used there as a school horse under the supervision of Captain Fred Marsman.

5. There was no evidence that the defendant converted the plaintiff’s horse.

The court made the following rulings on the defendant’s requests for rulings:

1. and 3. Denied. The defendant was not authorized, and had no right, to deliver the horse to Dana Hall School.

2. Allowed as a correct statement of law but not applicable to the facts found.

4. Denied as not in accordance with findings.

5. Denied.

The court, at the request of the plaintiff, made the following rulings:

1. On all the evidence the plaintiff is entitled to recover.

2. The defendant was a bailee of the [134]*134plaintiff’s horse, “Rise-N Shine” under a written agreement.

3. Denied.

4. Delivery of property by a bailee to another without the knowledge or consent of the owner is a conversion.

5. Delivery of property by a bailee to a person not authorized by the owner is itself a conversion rendering the bailee liable to the owner without regard to the question of due care.

6. Delivery of the plaintiff’s horse, “Rise-N Shine,” by the defendant to Dana Hall School without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff constitutes .conversion of the plaintiff’s horse, “Rise-N Shine.”

7. Delivery of the plaintiff’s horse,

“Rise-N Shine,” by the defendant to Dana Hall School without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff is itself a conversion of the horse rendering the defendant liable without regard to the question of due care or negligence.

8. Delivery of the plaintiff’s horse,

“Rise-N Shine,” by the defendant to Dana Hall School without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, which resulted in the horse’s death, makes the defendant liable to the plaintiff for- the fair value of the horse.

9. If the defendant converted the plaintiff’s horse, “Rise-N Shine,” it is liable for the fair value of thereof.

[135]*135The defendant claims to be aggrieved by the court’s failure to give defendant’s requests for rulings numbered i through 5 as set forth above, by the court’s ruling given at the request of the plaintiff numbered 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, and by the court’s findings that the delivery of the horse to Dana Hall school

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Mass. App. Dec. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tabor-school-camp-inc-v-norfolk-hunt-club-massdistctapp-1964.