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07 Gabeto v. Araneta, G.R. No. L-15674, 17 October 1921

This document summarizes a court case from 1921 in which Consolacion Gabeto sued Agaton Araneta for damages resulting from the death of her husband, Proceso Gayetano. There was a dispute over a carromata (horse-drawn carriage) between Araneta and the driver, Julio Pagnaya. During the dispute, the horse's bridle came off. Later, when the driver was fixing the bridle, the horse got spooked and ran off. Gayetano was thrown or jumped from the moving carriage and died from his injuries. The court found that while Araneta interfered with the carriage initially, his actions were too remote from the actual accident. The driver was primarily

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
100 views2 pages

07 Gabeto v. Araneta, G.R. No. L-15674, 17 October 1921

This document summarizes a court case from 1921 in which Consolacion Gabeto sued Agaton Araneta for damages resulting from the death of her husband, Proceso Gayetano. There was a dispute over a carromata (horse-drawn carriage) between Araneta and the driver, Julio Pagnaya. During the dispute, the horse's bridle came off. Later, when the driver was fixing the bridle, the horse got spooked and ran off. Gayetano was thrown or jumped from the moving carriage and died from his injuries. The court found that while Araneta interfered with the carriage initially, his actions were too remote from the actual accident. The driver was primarily

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Andrei Da Jose
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1 Torts and Damages | Atty.

Marianne Beltran-Angeles

G.R. No. L-15674 October 17, 1921

CONSOLACION GABETO, in her own right and as guardian ad litem of her three
children, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
AGATON ARANETA, defendant-appellant.

Jose E. Locsin for appellant.


Block, Johnston and Greenbaum for appellee.

STREET, J.:

This action was instituted in the Court of First Instance of Iloilo by Consolacion Gabeto, in her own
right as widow of Proceso Gayetano, and as guardian ad litem of the three children, Conchita
Gayetano, Rosita Gayetano, and Fermin Gayetano, for the purpose of recovering damages incurred by
the plaintiff as a result of the death of the said Proceso Gayetano, supposedly cause by the wrongful
act of the defendant Agaton Araneta. Upon hearing the evidence, his Honor, Judge L. M. Southworth,
awarded damages to the plaintiff in the amount of P3,000, from which judgment the defendant
appealed.

It appears in evidence that on August 4, 1918. Basilio Ilano and Proceso Gayetano took a carromata
near Plaza Gay, in the City of Iloilo, with a view to going to a cockpit on Calle Ledesma in the same
City. When the driver of the carromata had turned his horse and started in the direction indicated,
the defendant, Agaton Araneta, stepped out into the street, and laying his hands on the reins, stopped
the horse, at the same time protesting to the driver that he himself had called this carromata first.
The driver, one Julio Pagnaya, replied to the effect that he had not heard or seen the call of Araneta,
and that he had taken up the two passengers then in the carromata as the first who had offered
employment. At or about the same time Pagnaya pulled on the reins of the bridle to free the horse
from the control of Agaton Araneta, in order that the vehicle might pass on. Owing, however, to the
looseness of the bridle on the horse's head or to the rottenness of the material of which it was made,
the bit came out of the horse's mouth; and it became necessary for the driver to get out, which he did,
in order to find the bridle. The horse was then pulled over to near the curb, by one or the other — it
makes no difference which — and Pagnaya tried to fix the bridle.

While he was thus engaged, the horse, being free from the control of the bit, became disturbed and
moved forward, in doing which he pulled one of the wheels of the carromata up on the sidewalk and
pushed Julio Pagnaya over. After going a few years further the side of the carromata struck a police
telephone box which was fixed to a post on the sidewalk, upon which the box came down with a crash
and frightened the horse to such an extent that he set out at full speed up the street.

Meanwhile one of the passengers, to wit. Basilio Ilano, had alighted while the carromata was as yet
alongside the sidewalk; but the other, Proceso Gayetano, had unfortunately retained his seat, and
after the runaway horse had proceeded up the street to a point in front of the Mission Hospital, the
said Gayetano jumped or fell from the rig, and in so doing received injuries from which he soon died.

As to the facts above stated the evidence cannot be said to be materially in conflict; but there is decided
conflict upon the point of the exact relation of the defendant Agaton Araneta, to the runaway. The
evidence for the plaintiff on this point consists chiefly of the testimony of Julio Pagnaya and of Basilio
Ilano. They both say that while yet in the middle of the street, the defendant jerked the bridle, which
caused the bit to come out of the horse's mouth, and Julio says that at that juncture the throat latch
of the bridle was broken. Be this as it may, we are of the opinion that the mere fact that the defendant
interfered with the carromata by stopping the horse in the manner stated would not make him liable
for the death of Proceso Gayetano; because it is admitted by Julio Pagnaya that he afterwards got out
of the carromata and went to the horse's head to fix the bridle. The evidence is furthermore convincing
to the effect that, after Julio Pagnaya alighted, the horse was conducted to the curb and that an
appreciable interval of time elapsed — same witnesses say several minutes — before the horse started
on his career up the street. 1awph!l.net

It is therefore evident that the stopping of the rig by Agaton Araneta in the middle of the street was
too remote from the accident that presently ensued to be considered the legal or proximate cause
thereof. Moreover, by getting out and taking his post at the head of the horse, the driver was the person
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2 Torts and Damages | Atty. Marianne Beltran-Angeles

primarily responsible for the control of the animal, and the defendant cannot be charged with liability
for the accident resulting from the action of the horse thereafter.

Julio Pagnaya testifies to one fact which, if it were fully accredited, would possibly put a different
complexion on the case; for he says that when the horse was pulled over to the curb, the defendant, by
way of emphasizing his verbal denunciation of Pagnaya, gesticulated with one of his arms and
incidentally brought his hand down on the horse's nose. This, according to Pagnaya, is what made the
horse run away. There is no other witness who testifies to this; and it is noteworthy that Basilio Ilano
does not mention it. A decided preponderance of the evidence in our opinion is against it.

The evidence indicates that the bridle was old, and the leather of which it was made was probably so
weak as to be easily broken. Julio Pagnaya had a natural interest in refuting this fact, as well as in
exculpating himself in other respects; and we are of the opinion that the several witnesses who testified
for the defendant gave a more credible account of the affair than the witnesses for the plaintiff.
According to the witnesses for the defendant, it was Julio who jerked the rein, thereby causing the bit
it come out of the horse's mouth; and they say that Julio, after alighting, led the horse over to the curb,
and proceeded to fix the bridle; and that in so doing the bridle was slipped entirely off, when the horse,
feeling himself free from control, started to go away as previously stated.

Upon the whole we are constrained to hold that the defendant is not legally responsible for the death
of Proceso Gayetano; and though reluctant to interfere with the findings of fact of a trial court when
there is a conflict of testimony, the evidence in this case so clearly preponderates in favor of the
defendant, that we have no recourse but to reverse the judgment.

The judgment will therefore be reversed, and the defendant will be absolved from the complaint; and
it is so ordered, without express finding as to costs of either instance. So ordered.

Johnson, Araullo, Avanceña and Villamor, JJ., concur.

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