Maxwell v. Gibbs
Maxwell v. Gibbs
Opinion of the Court
*33 The court refused to instruct the jury “ that the plaintiffs cannot recover unless they have proved the agreement as alleged in the petition; and, having alleged a special contract of bailment, cannot recover upon any other.” This refusal is assigned as error. If it was error to refuse it, the error was abundantly cured by the giving of the subsequent instructions. Eor instance, the court did, in the second paragraph, instruct the jury “ that the burden of proof of the issue is upon the plaintiffs, and they cannot recover unless they Time sustained the allegations of thejpetition'bj a preponderance of the proof.”
Again, the defendants asked the court to instruct the jury, “ if the horse died of disease, the defendants are not liable;” which the court modified and gave, by adding, “ unless the disease was produced by their wrongful act.” Surely there was no error in this. .
In view of the pleadings and the conceded proofs (the evidence is not in the record), we see no error or conflict in the instructions of the court, or in any of the rulings.
•Affirmed..
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Maxwell & Downs v. Gibbs Et Al.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published