CHAPTER X. 
BAILMENT. 
§ 220. Definition. § 231. Actions for Liability of 
§ 221. Bailment a Contract. Bailee. 
§ 222. Bailer May Not Be § 232. Conversion. 
Owner. § 233. Liens. 
§ 223. Bailment Implies Knowl- § 234. faraieral, Tens) 
edge of the Bailee. § 235. Agister’s Lien, 
: ‘ § 236. Trainer’s Lien. 
oO 
He eer eA of Bailee. 937. Priority of Right. 
: § 238. Right of Sale. 
§ 226. Duty of Bailor. § 239, Estrays and Trespassing 
§ 227. Liability of Bailee. 
Animals. 
§ 228. Warranty of Bailor. § 240. Waiver of Lien. 
§ 229. Bailment, Sale, or Gift. _¢ 941. Ilegal Sale by Bailee. 
§ 230. Bailee’s Right to Use § 242. Lien Once Lost Can Not 
Property Bailed. Be Revived. 
220. Definition. The term ‘‘bailment”’ is held 
to include that large variety of cases in which 
the personal property of one person is left tempo- 
rarily in the charge of another. The law of bail- 
ment is therefore involved in a large proportion 
of the cases arising in disputes over the handling 
and care of animals. The livery man is a bailor 
when he rents out one of his teams; and he is a 
bailee when he takes the horse of another to feed. 
The veterinarian is a bailee when he assumes the 
care of an animal sick either on the owner’s prem- 
isés, or in the veterinary hospital. The owner of 
a pasture is a bailee when he takes the stock of a 
neighbor to agist, and the blacksmith is a bailee 
when he shoes an animal. The owner of a stallion 
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