This ivas an action for the recovery of the value of a mule, alleged to have been killed b}^ a passenger-train, The defendant admitted the fact of the injury, but. denied all negligence, and alleged affirmatively that the cause of the injury was the plaintiff’s carelessness in hobbling; the mule and turning it out in the vicinity of the railroad.
The evidence tended to prove that the plaintiff had tied, the mule’s head to one of its forefeet with a halter to prevent it from breaking fences, and.had turned it-out to graze-upon the commons ; that the train was running at the speed of twenty or twenty-five miles an hour, which was not above-schedule time ; that the engineer first saw the mule in the-act of coming upon the ti'ack, about sixty yards in front of the engine ; that the brakes were immediately called for and put on, the engine reversed and the alarm whistle sounded,, but the track was wet and slippery, and the hobbled condition of the mule impeded its motion and prevented it from getting out of the way; that the train was not materially checked before the mule was siruck and it would have required not less than one hundred yards, perhaps two hundred in the existing state of the track and with only handbrakes and the other appliances then at hand, in which to stop the train.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff. One of the assignments in the motion for a new trial assailed the verdict as being contrary to the evidence.
Several questions have been argued here, but we notice only one. A new trial should have been granted on the merits. The statutory presumption of negligence, arising from the circumstance that the mule was run down by the train, was as completely rebutted as it is possible for evidence to rebut it in any case. The engineer and fireman, the only eye-witnesses of the accident, told a plain and consistent story. Their testimony as to the substantive facts of the injury was not discredited, nor was it even controverted by the plaintiff’s witnesses.
In Kentucky Central R. Co. v. Talbot, 78 Ky., 621, the court of appeals of Kentucky, construing a similar statute, say: “The statute is in derogation of the rule (that negligence must be affirmatively proved) and grows out of the difficulty ordinarily supposed to exist with the plaintiff in making proof of facts presumed to be peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant or its employes. Therefore whenever the consciences of those in whose breasts the fact, if in existence, is presumed to rest, are purged, the reason for the law ceasing, the ordinary rule ceases, the prima facie case is overcome, and the plaintiff has failed to make out his case. It appears to us that the only safe and just rule in a case arising under this statute is, that the railroad company should be required, when in its power, to introduce as witnesses those employes who, from the circumstances of the particular case, would be presumed to know whether there had been any negligence on the part of the company ; and when, unimpeached, such witnesses testify that there was no negligence, and the circumstances do not contradict them, the law is for the defendant.”
We have not attached any special significance to the fact that the mule’s foot was fettered. If it was negligence in the owner to turn his beast loose in this condition, it was probably too remote to affect the case, provided the defendant could by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided injuring it. In Davis v. Mann, 10 Mees. & W., 545, the plaintiff, having fettered the fore feet of his ass, had turned it into a public highway. The ass was grazing on the side of the road, when the defendant’s wagon and team, coming down the road at a “smartish pace,” ran against the ass, knocked it down and killed it. The driver of the wagon was some little distance behind the horses, Erskine, J., told the jury that, though the plaintiff’s act, in leaving the donkey on the highway so fettered as to prevent his getting out of the way of carriages traveling along it, might be illegal, still if the proximate cause of the injury was attributable to the want of proper conduct on the part of the driver of the wagon, the action was maintainable against the defendant; and he directed them to find for the plaintiff, if they thought the accident might have been avoided by the exercise of proper care on the part of the driver. And a rule for a new trial, on the ground of misdirection, was refused by the court of exchequer. See also L. R. & F. 8. R’y. v. Finley, 37 Ark., 536.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.