70 Pa. Super. 247 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1918
Opinion by
The learned court below entered judgment on a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant appeals. There is assigned for error only the refusal of the trial judge to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant and thereafter to enter judgment in his favor non obstante veredicto.
It appears to us the record in the present case discloses material facts that readily distinguish it from the case cited. The present plaintiff had his eye destroyed by a metal shot of the size called BB discharged from a gun by the defendant. The distance that separated the two boys at the time of the injury was fifty or more feet. It is true the gun was an air gun. That is to say, the propulsive force that drove the shot was compressed air, not gunpowder. We suppose a court of law could not take judicial cognizance of the size and weight of a shot pellet of the class known as BB, but the jury had the pellet before them and therefore could determine the probable effect of such a missile when driven with force against a human body. According to the testimony the defendant’s son had been operating a gun of this kind for a considerable period of time. He first had a cheaper and probably less powerful gun in which each pellet discharged had to be separately loaded. He sold that gun and procured another at more than three times the cost of the first which was a magazine gun and could be loaded with fifty BB shot at one time.
We are asked then to say, as a matter of law, that an irresponsible boy, with the full knowledge of his father, may possess and use, as an innocent toy, a device loaded with fifty BB shot, capable of being discharged with such force as to destroy the eye of a human being at a distance of fifty or more feet. We are unable to so say. It surely cannot be the test that such an instrumentality can be declared to be a toy merely because the propulsive force that discharged the pellet was compressed air rather than gunpowder. Compressed air lifts tons of water from the bottom of a mine to the surface; it drives machinery ; it hauls trains of loaded mine cars, and is one of the effective methods by the use of which the powerful forces of nature are harnessed and utilized by man. The writer of this opinion daily sees, when the schools are in session, about a thousand children arriving and departing from their places of instruction. To say, as a matter of law, that all of them, or any considerable number of them, could equip themselves, with the knowledge of their parents, with guns or toys of the character described by this evidence and use them at pleasure in their games and sports, would seem to be an inconceivable proposition. Its results for mischief and injury would probably exceed those flowing from any epidemic that could occur.
Judgment affirmed.