delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was to recover damages for an injury to a horse and buggy, alleged to have been occasioned by a hole in a street, negligently left uncovered by the city authorities.
The facts appeared to be, that the driver of the buggy when attempting to turn from one street into another, got one of the lines entangled under the horse’s tail, which caused the horse to commence backing, and as the driver'was about to jump out, the horse fell into this hole in the embankment on which the street was built.
The court, on the trial, declared the law to be “ that it was the duty of the defendant to keep its streets in a proper state of repair, so that they should be reasonably safe for travel, and if the defendant permitted one of its streets to be and remain out of repair, and at the time said street was so out of repair, the plaintiff’s horse and buggy were being driven along the same, and without the fault of the driver, the horse and buggy of plaintiff were injured by reason of said street being out of repair, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover, even though such injury was the combined result of accident and of the defendant’s neglect to keep said street in repair; provided the driver of said horse was in no fault.”
The court refused to declare the law as asked by defendant, that if the defect in the street was not the sole cause of the injury, no recovery could be had ; and therefore if before the accident, the driver of the horse had lost all control over him, and the horse contirmed uncontrollable at the time of the accident, the plaintiff could not recover.
Another instruction was asked; that if this occurred on Sunday, and tb.e plaintiff who was the owner of the horse and buggy had hired them out on that day from his livery stable, no recovery could be had.
There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. The point presented by the instructions in this case, I understand, was decided at the last term at St. Joseph, in the case of Bassett vs. The City of St. Joseph, 53 Mo., 290, in which *601case, this court adopted the view taken by the New Hampshire court in Winship vs. Enfield, 42 N. H., 202, and declined to follow the decisions in Massachusetts, referred to in the brief of defendant’s counsel.
The Circuit Court of Jackson County evidently adopted the views of the New Hampshire cases, and determined, that although the injury was the result of accident, in the temporary loss of control over the horse; yet, if that accident would have resulted in no damage, had the street been in a proper repair, the city must be held responsible.
Indeed, it is not very clear that the Massachusetts cases go to the extent of holding that a mere temporary loss of control over the horse driven along the street would relieve the city from responsibility. It is held, that where «the horse escapes from the driver entirely, or is totally ungovernable, or is a vicious animal, the damage occasioned is not chargeable to the city or town, because it ultimately occurs in a street or at a place where the Street is out of repair.
In this case the driver had not lost control of the horse, except during the short period of his backing into the hole, and if no such hole had been there, no damage would have occurred. In the cáse of Hunt vs. Pownall (9 Verm., 411), Redfield, J. said: “In every case of damage occurring on a highway, we could suppose a state of circumstances in which the injury would not have occurred. If the team had not been too young, or restive, or too old, or too headstrong, or the harness had not been defective, or the carriage insufficient, no loss would have intervened. It is to guard against these constantly occurring accidents that' towns are required to guard in building highways. The traveler is not bound to see to it that his carriage and harness are always perfect, and his team of the most manageable character and in the most perfect training, before he ventures upon the highway. If he could be always sure of all this, he would not require any further guaranty of his safety unless the roads were absolutely impassable. If the plaintiff is in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence and the injury is attributable to the insufficiency of the road, *602conspiring with some accidental cause, the defendants are liable.”
This is in substance the position of the Circuit Court in its instructions in the case.
Judgment affirmed.
Judges Wagner and Sherwood absent.