Judges: Peaslee
Filed Date: 6/26/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff's evidence tended to prove that the defendant sent the plaintiff out upon the streets of Laconia in charge of a green horse weighing 1,400 pounds. The horse was difficult to control around street cars, and had once broken away from the, defendant's control. The plaintiff was seventeen years old, and while attempting to hold the horse by the head, as instructed, was dragged by the horse and received the injuries complained of. Upon this evidence it was for the jury to say whether it was the act of a reasonable man to put such a boy at so perilous a task. It is not merely a question of whether the plaintiff knew as much about the horse as the defendant did. The question of the plaintiff's immaturity of judgment is also a factor in determining what prudence required of the defendant. The nonsuit was properly denied.
The evidence that the defendant had sued his vendor on account of the character of the horse was not admissible. It was so ruled by the presiding justice, and that was the law of the trial. Batchelder v. Railway,
The other exceptions relate to details of the trial and are not likely to arise on the retrial of the case.
Verdict set aside.
All concurred.