226
About five in the afternoon of that day, the plaintiff was
bringing one of his horse out of the mews, and was about to put
down planks for the purpose of getting him over the narrower
space, which was least obstructed. The defendant Davis asked
him what he was going to do, and said he would not be answerable
for anything that happened by taking the horse over in that
manner. The plaintiff
asked how he was to do it; and said that
he must get the horse out. The defendant said: "The plaintiff,
with assistance, led the horse out, over the gravel. A little
before six in the same evening, the plaintiff endeavoured to get
another horse out in the same direction (neither defendant being
then present); but the rubbish gave way. The horse fell into
the trench, and was strangled in an endeavour to drag him out
with ropes.
Evidence was given,
on the part of the defendants, that, on this
second occasion, their men cautioned the plaintiff not to make
the attempt, for that he would endanger, not only his horse, but
the lives of men who were in the trench; but that the plaintiff
said
he did not care, and would go over. The statement was
denied by the plaintiff.
The Lord Chief Justice, in summing up, left it to the jury, in
the first place, to say whether the defendants had been guilty
of culpable negligence in not fencing the trench. His Lordship
then observed that, if the defendants' witnesses were to be
believed, and the plaintiff on
the second occasion had, in
227
defiance of warning, incurred an evidently great danger, this
was a rashness on his part which would excuse the defendants:
but that it could not be the plaintiff's duty to refrain
altogether from coming out of the mews merely because the
defendants had made the passage in some degree dangerous: that
the defendants were not entitled to keep the occupiers of the
mews in a state of siege till the passage was declared safe,
first creating a nuisance and then excusing themselves by giving
notice that there was some danger: though, if the plaintiff had
persisted in running upon a great and obvious danger,
his action
could not be maintained. And he left it to the jury to say
whether or not the plaintiff had so acted. Verdict for
plaintiff: damages £20.
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