Case Name: John McGahie, Respondent, v. "Anna" McClennen, the Said Name "Anna" Being Fictitious, Defendant's Real Christian Name Being Unknown to Plaintiff, Appellant
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1903
Citations: 86 A.D. 263
Docket Number: 
Parties: John McGahie, Respondent, v. “Anna” McClennen, the Said Name “ Anna” Being Fictitious, Defendant’s Real Christian Name Being Unknown to Plaintiff, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 86
Pages: 263–265

Head Matter:
John McGahie, Respondent, v. “Anna” McClennen, the Said Name “ Anna” Being Fictitious, Defendant’s Real Christian Name Being Unknown to Plaintiff, Appellant.
Testimony of an interested witness—the jury may credit it in part only—negligence is not necessarily implied from the fact that horses run away.
A jury is hot obliged to accept as true the entire testimony of any interested witness, but may accept such part thereof as they think credible and reject the rest.
The mere fact that a team of horses runs away does not necessarily imply negligence on the part of the driver.
: -Appeal by the defendant, “Anna” McClennen, from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of ¡New York, borough of Brooklyn, in favor of the plaintiff, entered on the 9th day of June, 1902, upon the verdict of a .jury, for fifty-eight .dollars and .twenty-five cents.
Francis B. Mullin, for the appellant.
Mitchell May, for the respondent,

Opinion:
Willard Bartlett, J. :
• -In-this action the jury awarded the plaintiff fifty-eight: dollars and twenty-five cents damages for injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff's wagon in consequence of a collision with the defendant's wagon in Prospect Park, in the borough of -Brooklyn, on the afternoon of the 21stday:of ¡November, 1899. There is no dispute as to the fact of the collision. -The plaintiff's team was being driven northward through the park by the plaintiff's daughter, who was accompanied 'by a young lady friend. The defendant's team approached from behind, going in the same direction. It was driven by a coachman and the defendant herself was in the vehicle accompanied by a young grandchild. Two entirely different versions, of the .manner in which the accident occurred are given by the witnesses for the Despectivo parties.- According to the evidence for the plaintiff, the defendant's -driver lost control of his team, which ran away and rushed upon the plaintiff's wagon so-that one of the defendant's-horses-thrust-his fore feet in the latter -part of the vehicle and overturned it. According to- the evidence in behalf of the defendant, her driver had his-team under perfect control, and the accident was caused by the sudden turning of the plaintiff's team to the right, directly across the-road in front of the horses of the defendant, so that a collision became unavoidable, no matter how much care was exercised by the-defendant's driver.
There was testimony to the effect that-immediately after the-occurrence of the accident the defendant gave her Card to the-young lady who was in the plaintiff's wagon, saying: " I will do what is right about this. I have only had my horses two-weeks. I gave $600 for them, and I don't think that my coachman understood the team." The defendant denied having made-this statement in reference to the coachman, but of course the. jury-were not.bound to believe her denial. .
Taking all the evidence together, and applying the rule that the jury were not obliged to accept as true the entire testimony of any interested witness, but might accept such as they thought credible and reject the rest, it would seem that there was ample proof to support the verdict. The fact that the team seemed to be running away just before the- accident was testified to by a gentleman who witnessed the collision from his automobile, and who appears to have had no interest whatever in the litigation. This fact, coupled with the testimony of-the defendant's driver, indicating that his team was perfectly managable if driven properly, and the statement of the defendant herself that she did not think he understood the team, would justify the inference that he negligently lost control of the horses and thus caused the collision, or that he was not competent to drive them at all, and that the defendant was aware of that fact. Either view would suffice to support a finding of negligence against her. It. is quite true that the mere running away of a. team of horses does not necessarily imply negligence on the part of the driver. (Gottwald v. Bernheimer, 6 Daly, 212, opinion of Joseph F. Daly, J., and cases therein cited.) The learned Municipal Court judge charged the jury properly in this respect, and as favorably as the defendant could have requested. There was no error in the exclusion or admission of evidence, and, as I have already shown, I think the proof is sufficient to sustain the verdict.
- The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
Goodrich, P. J., Woodward and Jerks, JJ., concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs.