Willis v. Schuster

28 So. 2d 518, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 591
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1946
DocketNo. 6972.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 So. 2d 518 (Willis v. Schuster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willis v. Schuster, 28 So. 2d 518, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 591 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

This is a suit in which plaintiff, an emancipated minor over the age of 18, seeks to recover damages for injuries sustained as a result of being thrown from a horse which had been rented from the Broadmoor Riding Academy, owned and operated by the defendant, Schuster. The Indemnity Company of North America, public liability insurer of Schuster, was joined as a party defendant.

Plaintiff bases her cause of action upon the allegations that the horse which she hired for the purpose of riding, by the name of "Little Dan," was of a vicious, fractious and highly nervous disposition, to the knowledge of the owner and employees of the riding academy, who failed to impart such knowledge of the dangerous propensities of the said horse to the plain, tiff. Plaintiff's petition further alleged that the horse was of a type which might easily become frightened, was therefore dangerous to its rider, and that a duty of warning prospective riders that they should ride said horse at their peril was therefore laid upon defendant Schuster and his employees.

After trial there was judgment for defendants, from which judgment plaintiff appealed.

It is shown that plaintiff and her escort, a United States Army Sergeant, on April 29, 1944, rented two horses from the Broadmoor Riding Academy, and, after riding for about thirty minutes, stopped their horses in the vicinity of Centenary Stadium in the City of Shreveport for the purpose of watching a drill by air corps cadets. According to the testimony of plaintiff, who was the only witness as to the incidents in connection with the accident, her horse, later identified by the name of "Little Dan," frightened by a sudden burst of music by the band, ran away. Plaintiff was unable to bring her horse under control, and, after running for several blocks, the horse tripped or fell on a paved street near the stadium, throwing plaintiff violently to the street and causing a serious and painful fracture of the bone of her left thigh.

It is contended on behalf of plaintiff that the defendant, Schuster, and his employees were guilty of negligence on three counts, any one of which would be sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover. These three counts of negligence may be briefly set forth as follows:

(1) That the employee of defendant who furnished the horse to plaintiff knew the animal to be high-spirited, afraid of noises, and of such a nervous disposition as might lead him to throw a rider.

(2) That it was negligence on the part of defendant's employee, after plaintiff's request for a gentle horse, to assure her that she was receiving such an animal, when, as a matter of fact, the horse was not of a gentle disposition.

(3) That plaintiff contracted to hire a gentle horse and defendant's employee breached the contract of hire by failing to furnish plaintiff with such an animal. *Page 520

[1] Having made the necessary allegations in her petition in support of these claims, the burden of proof rested upon plaintiff, no matter in how slight a degree, to make out a case.

Conceding, only for the purpose of argument, the correctness of plaintiff's position under the contentions set forth, it is nonetheless essential that plaintiff fulfill at least a minimum requirement in the way of proof by establishing that the horse furnished her by defendant's employee was not gentle, and that such lack of gentleness was known to defendant and his employees, or could and should have been known to them.

It is to be observed that we have phrased this proposition in the manner most favorable to plaintiff, one which would permit the allowance of her claims, if she had fulfilled even the barest requirements in the way of establishing her case. We have proceeded in this manner because we propose to set forth in this opinion the evidential facts developed on trial of the case which convincingly and finally establish plaintiff's failure to fulfill even so slight a burden in the way of proof.

As we have stated above, plaintiff was the only witness who testified as to the circumstances immediately surrounding the incident of the run-away which led to the accident. She testified that on the date in question, accompanied by Sgt. Edward Steckbauer, she went to the Broadmoor Riding Academy and asked for a gentle horse, notwithstanding the fact that she had been riding practically all her life; that she was furnished a horse (later identified as being the horse known as "Little Dan") by one of the academy's employees, and proceeded, accompanied by her escort, to ride over some dirt roads and fields in the neighborhood for a brief period of time, eventually stopping in the neighborhood of the Centenary Stadium for the purpose of watching a cadet drill; that the music of a band which had been playing for some five or ten minutes suddenly increased in volume, startling the horse she was riding, which bolted; that, despite her efforts to control the animal, she was finally forced to drop the reins, and that the horse fell at the curb of a nearby paved street, throwing her and causing serious injuries.

It is significant that plaintiff did not testify to any actions of the horse, prior to the time of the incident related, which indicated it to be other than gentle and easily handled. While we have no disposition to doubt plaintiff's story, nonetheless, it is noticeable that no attempt was made to procure the testimony, either in person or by deposition, of her escort, although plaintiff testified she believed him to be out of the service and presently located in the State of Wisconsin, and offered no explanation as to why she did not avail herself of what would certainly have been effective and convincing corroboration of her own narrative of the incident which is the basis of this suit.

On the points bearing upon the disposition and characteristics of the horse, plaintiff perforce relied upon the testimony of defendant's employees, and presented two negro grooms, who were employed at the riding academy, as witnesses. We have carefully examined the testimony of these witnesses and find nothing which would indicate that the horse "Little Dan" was anything but a gentle, rideable animal without any of those quirks and foibles of animal nature which would have rendered him dangerous or unsafe in any degree whatsoever. It is true that there is some testimony on the part of these witnesses as to the fact that the horse was a little "high-spirited," "nervous" and "touchy" to the extent that he would shy from sudden noises and objects and would become startled upon being approached from behind. But these characteristics evidence none of the elements of meanness or fractiousness which would indicate an unruly disposition or detract from the common acceptation and understanding of the term "gentle" as applied to a horse.

The defendant, Schuster, and the manager of the academy, one McDonald, both testified that they were thoroughly acquainted with the horse in question, and both testified that he was of a gentle disposition, *Page 521 favored by ladies for riding, and that there was nothing in his record which indicated a bad disposition or mean spirit.

But, by far the most convincing testimony in the record was givin by Dr. G.M. Stamper, who sold the horse, "Little Dan," to the defendant, Schuster, after having owned him for some three or four years. This witness testified that the horse was perfectly gentle, that he had been bought and used for the special pleasure of his two young daughters, who rode the horse frequently.

Some attempt was made on behalf of plaintiff to show that "Little Dan" had a record of bad behavior, evidenced by his running away from other riders, but these facts were not established.

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Bluebook (online)
28 So. 2d 518, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-schuster-lactapp-1946.