Thebasic question to be determined here is whether abstraction or momentary forgetfulness of a known danger constitutes contributory negligence as a matter of law.
As this is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit, such judgment can be supported only if, “disregarding conflicting evidence, and giving to plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn from that evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.”
(Card
v.
Boms,
Plaintiff La Rue (Larry) Andre, aged 16 years, in the second year of high school, was injured while going down a ramp at the Richmond Union High School. (For convenience, Larry will hereafter be referred to as plaintiff.) The building consisted of two floors, connected by ramps at both ends. Plaintiff had attended the school for a year and a half before the accident. The accident was caused by the fact that a portion of a nonslip cork carpet or covering had worn off and left the ramp in a slippery condition. The incline of the ramp was about 4 inches to the foot, and a covering over the concrete surface was necessary to prevent slipping. A number of students had slipped at this place. They slipped frequently. The superintendent of buildings and grounds of the Richmond schools admitted that he had known the condition for a year, and that it needed correction, in order to prevent people from slipping. No attempt was made to block off the worn portion of the ramp so that students would not use it.
*349 Plaintiff had just left his locker and was going to choir practice, following the normal usual path. He used the ramp daily. The exposed' smooth condition of the cement had existed as long as he had been at the school. Plaintiff wore leather heels and was proceeding at a normal walk, carrying two books in his left hand, and a map in his right. He was not thinking about the exposed surface of the ramp. He had reached a point about two-thirds or three-quarters of the way down the ramp, which was not crowded. His vision was not obstructed in any way. “No, I wasn’t thinking of it because my mind—I was trying out to get into choir and I was thinking pretty strong on that because I like it, and when I saw Al, I said ‘Hi,’ and that is all I can think of that I could have been thinking of. I was only thinking of one thing at a time-.” He was looking at Al, and said “Hi” to him. As he stepped down with his right foot it hit the cement and started sliding out from under him. He had the map in his right hand (the side toward the railing). He dropped the map and reached for the railing but went down, breaking his left leg above the knee.
Plaintiff had seen other persons slip but not fall at the same place before, knew the ramp was slippery, and had slipped there himself about 10 or 15 times, although he had never fallen. At the time of the accident his left leg was weak due to two breaks it had received, one about six months before. He could not run and did not use the stairs which were available in the building because of his weak leg, which still troubled him. Plaintiff testified that he did not believe he had hold of the railing. His testimony in this respect is contradicted by Al Turetta, a fellow student, who stated: “In fact he was holding onto it when he started to say ‘Hi’ to me. He let loose and started to do like that (indicating [a wave of the hand]), and started to grab back onto it and missed it.” A1 was “pretty sure” that was the way it happened.
At the close of plaintiff’s case defendants moved for a non-suit on two grounds, first, that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of defendants, and secondly, that the evidence established as a matter of law that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The court granted the motion on the second ground only.
Under the rule applying to nonsuits, there can be no question but that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of defendants’ liability, and that
*350
the evidence justifies the inference that plaintiff, although knowing of the danger of slipping at this place, was holding on to the railing, and in order to greet a fellow student, in a moment of abstraction or forgetfulness, took his hand off the railing, slipped and fell. Whether such momentary .forgetfulness or abstraction by a student in a place where he was permitted and even required by the condition of his leg and the set-up of the building to go, and where he would pass and necessarily greet other students, was a proximate cause of the accident and constituted contributory negligence, was for the jury to determine. In
Anthony
v.
Hobbie,
As said in
White
v.
Davis,
A somewhat similar case to the one at bar is the ease of
Schleif
v.
Grigsby,
“In
Giraudi
v.
Electric Imp. Co.,
“The case of
Anderson
v.
Southern California Edison Co.,
While in the Sehleif case the shade, leaves and branches of a tree obscured the view of the line, that fact does not affect the rule that to constitute contributory negligence as a matter of law it must appear that the injury could result only from a forgetfulness.
In our case, at the very least, the question of whether the accident could have resulted only from plaintiff’s momentary forgetfulness and raising his hand to greet a friend is one upon which reasonable minds may differ, and therefore, one which must be left to the jury.
Defendants contend that plaintiff, because he had seen others slip at this same place, had slipped there himself, and because of the weakened condition of his leg was more susceptible to injury, should be held to a greater realization of the amount of danger existent. They make such contention to answer the following principle, which they concede is the law: “Knowledge that danger exists is not knowledge of the amount of danger necessary to charge a person with negligence in assuming the risk caused by such danger. The doing of an act with appreciation of the
amount
of danger in addition to mere appreciation of the danger is necessary in order to say as a matter of law that a person is negligent. ’ ’
(Ridge
v.
Boulder Creek etc. School Dist.,
In
Smith
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
Defendants have cited cases in which minors have been held to be guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, such as
Bolar
v.
Maxwell Hardware Co.,
It is interesting to note that after the opinion in
Spendlove
v.
Pacific Electric Ry. Co.,
77 A.C.A. 1036 [
This last decision illustrates the fact that in the last few years the tendency of the Supreme Court has been away from the stricter view of preceding years, where frequently contributory negligence was established as a matter of law, to the present situation in which such cases “are rare.” (See
Anthony
v.
Hobbie, supra
[
Defendants rely greatly on
Mautino
v.
Sutter Hospital Assn.,
Whether plaintiff’s failure here to be aware of the danger was due to forgetfulness, or abstraction in thinking about his desire to be accépted in the choir, is immaterial as the rule is the same in both instances. “Even forgetfulness of a known danger will not always operate to prevent a recovery, for to forget is not negligence unless it shows a want of ordinary care.
(Roseberry
v.
Edward F. Niehaus & Co.,
“Even though appellant’s testimony was susceptible of the one construction that prior to the accident she did observe the unevenness of said platform, which it is claimed constituted the element of danger, there would still be the question for the determination of the jury as to whether or not it was a want of ordinary care on the part of appellant not to have kept in mind such element of danger while arising from the stool and leaving the platform.
(Hayward
v.
Downer,
The courts are getting away from the principle established in
Reynolds
v.
Los Angeles Gas & E. Co.,
Defendants contend that because plaintiff testified ■that he said, or was trying to say, “Hi” as he was bringing his right foot down to the slippery spot, his exchange of salutations with A1 did not constitute a distraction. This is a rather tenuous argument, as, if plaintiff was actually distracted before he slipped, it would make no difference whether it was before he started to step or was in the act of stepping. In any event, this, as well as the question of whether he consciously stepped into a known danger and neither forgot nor was in a condition of abstraction, was a matter for the jury to consider. ,
We cannot say as a matter of law that abstraction concerning choir practice, or forgetfulness due to hailing a school chum suddenly, is not an instinctive reaction or act on sudden impulse, or that it was out of character for the ordinary schoolboy of plaintiff’s age and experience. “Plaintiff is bound only to that duty of care which a normal child of the same age would be expected to exercise in such a situation.”
(Taylor
v.
Oakland Scavenger Co.,
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Peters, P. J., and Ward, J., concurred.
