This is certainly an extraordinary report to be made by a sensible man-and a good lawyer. The action is to recover for an injury suffered by the horse of the plaintiff, under circumstances where no possible fault could be imputed to him, and where the conduct of the defendant was most culpably negligent. On this point the referee finds as a question of fact, distinctly and emphatically, that defendant’s road was out of repair, and at the place of the injury was defective and dilapidated, with holes in and between the plank where other horses had stepped in, and the attention of the defendant’s gate keeper was called to it. As conclusions of law, he finds that the injury was the result of the bad condition of defendant’s road, and that defendant is chargeable with negligence for that condition, and liable for the injury complained of, and that it was without fault on the part of the plaintiff; and these conclusions are abundantly sustained by the evidence. It was a case that called for the exercise of no special liberality towards the defendant, and where the plaintiff was entitled to full compensation for the injury he had thus causelessly suffered. And yet, when the referee comes to the task of computing these damages, he appears not only to reject in mass the whole of the plaintiff’s testimony, given by eight witnesses besides the plaintiff himself, but to have found some things in opposition even to the *80defendant’s witnesses; and by a studious effort at the closest ciphering, to bring down the damages to a point where the plaintiff, an admitted sufferer, without the shghtest imputation of blame on his part, goes out of court with the privilege of paying some $28 for a lame and injured horse, and the defendant, an acknowledged wrong-doer, is rewarded with a substantial triumph in the legal arena.
I dissent entirely from the conclusions of the referee, both in respect to the temporary character of the injury, and the amount of damages as they existed in fact, and as found by him, even upon his own theory. On the first, point, his finding is not only unsustained by evidence, but it is directly in the face of the most overwhelming testimony to the contrary. Every one of the nine witnesses sworn on the part of the plaintiff, concur in stating that the injury was of a permanent character; that it both injured and disfigured the foot, rendering the animal-much less valuable- for service, and depreciated her value in the market. A fair average of the testimony would make that depreciation considerably over $100, and the veiy lowest estimate of the difference in her value, before and after the injury, is put by one witness at the sum of $100. Such an array of evidence should be met by something of corresponding strength by the other party, to justify a finding which sets it all aside. But how is the fact ? Only four witnesses on the part of the defendant profess to speak of the value of the mare at any time, and of these, Springer says, she was worth $100 last year, and that he does not know her present valne. . Hinsdell says, she was worth $125 before the injury, and of her present value he does not speak at all, but adds: “if the horse is lame, it decreases the value considerably; if not lame, should not think it would injure.” Leach gives her value before the injury at '$100, and says not a word of her present value; while Collins swears expressly, that in September, previous to the trial, she was worth from $100 to $125, but that “the wound takes off at least $20 from the value of the mare.” To show her condition about *81the time of the trial, three or four witnesses on the part of the defendant, spoke of her either as she appeared while merely passing, or on a cursory examination of the injured leg, or as exhibiting no lameness while on a walk, while on the part of the plaintiff, witnesses speak who had driven her, rode after her, and treated her for the injury, and they concur substantially in the character and continuance of the injury, down to the time of the trial, and its permanent effect upon her value. While the report of a referee will not, as a general rule, be disturbed, if there is evidence which may be said fairly to sustain it, even though there is, apparently, a strong array against it, it will not be upheld where the evidence on which it professes to be founded, not only comes far short of sustaining, but in some of its aspects is at war with its conclusions; and where that, on the other side is not only numercially, but intrinsically overwhelming;' and such is the aspect which, upon this point, this case presents to my mind.
Upon the question of the actual damages, assuming the injury to have been only temporary, there seems to be the same studious effort to place the damages at the lowest possible figure that the testimony of any witness would authorize, and the same wholesale ignoring of the testimony on the part of the plaintiff. On the subject of the value, of keeping the animal, six witnesses were swom on the part of the plaintiff, three of whom placed it at seventy-five cents per day, and three at from seventy-five cents to one dollar. On behalf of defendant, only two were sworn on this point, one of whom put the keeping, including care and nursing, at seventy-five cents, and the other at from thirty to forty cents per day. This last witness, by the way, indicated Ms reliability, and perhaps commended Ms judgment to the referee, by stating that at the time tMs mare was kept, he did not know the price of oats, nor how many pounds of hay a horse would eat in a day, and that he made his estimate upon the ground that it would ruin aman to keep tM’ee or four horses, if it cost more than the sum he named. If the witnesses were all equally, *82reliable a fair average of their testimony would place the worth of keeping a horse at from seventy-five to eighty cents per day, and yet in utter disregard of the plaintiff’s testimony, and straining that of defendant to the lowest possible point, the referee puts the expense at fifty cents per day.
On the subject of the value of the use of the mare per day, the same criticisms will substantially apply, and the compensation is brought down to the minimum which the defendant’s testimony will permit, and no regard is apparently paid to that on the part of the plaintiff,' and what is a little remarkable, while the plaintiff is allowed for thirty-four days keeping, he is only allowed for thirty days use. This is arrived at probably, by the ingenious device of omitting^ the Sabbath days. But if such a nice scruple was to be indulged, I am somewhat at a loss to divine why the care and keeping for those days was not also deducted, since if the horse was not conscientious enough to refrain from eating, and from exacting the care and attention which his condition would seem to require, his owner surely must be expected to omit on those days, those works of necessity and mercy, which even a poor brute might reasonably demand at his hands.
In an early stage of the trial, it seems to have been agreed upon by the counsel for both parties, that the value of the use of the horse was $1.50 per day, for thirty-four days; but on the suggestion afterwards, that there was a misunderstanding, and that the admission only related to the use of a horse for the four days that the plaintiff had been obliged to hire one of Gaesbecker, the stipulation was vacated, and the question opened for further testimony. I don’t think the referee is chargeable with any error in relieving the party under the circumstances, from the effect of his admission; but two things seem to have been overlooked by the referee. ' The stipulation as it stands, with the correction insisted upon and allowed by the referee, admitted thirty-four days as the time for which the plaintiff was to be allowed; and that the use of Gesbecker’s horse was worth $1.50 per day for four days. *83In the face of this stipulation, thus binding upon the party, by his own admission, the referee has struck out the four days, and instead of the $1.50 for four days, has only allowed sev-< enty-five cents per day for the whole thirty days.
This alone .would have given the plaintiff a report for more than $50, and there is no possible escape from this, even if we adopt the entire theory of the referee, in his estimate of the amount of damages. But upon what ground it was assumed that Gfaesbecker’s horse was worth $1.50 per day, while the plaintiff’s was worth only seventy-live cents for the same period, especially as there was no proof that he performed anything more than the usual service the plaintiff required of his own horse, passes my comprehension.
I am inclined to think there were some errors committed upon the trial by the referee, in relation to the reception of evidence. But I do not think it worth while to notice them, since upon the grounds already discussed, .if right in my views, there must, of necessity, be a new trial.
I am of the opinion that the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event, and the order of reference vacated.