Briese v. Maechtle

146 Wis. 89 | Wis. | 1911

Winslow, O. J.

The action is novel, if not entirely without precedent in the books. Two school boys, one a little under and one a little over the age of ten, were playing the time-honored and innocent games of youth in the school yard when by the purest accident one ran into the other and inflicted a serious injury, but an injury which no one could possibly anticipate. Under all ordinary and usual conditions, the only results would be a little shaking up of one or both of the participants and the accumulation of a little more dust upon already dusty clothes. Had this been the case here no one would have thought for a moment that there could be legal -liability for the act, but unfortunately a permanent injury has resulted to the plaintiff, -which will” seriously affect his usefulness and his comfort during his whole life, and the fact that such an injury has resulted makes it important that the question of liability should be examined with care, to the end that the conclusion reached should be based on correct principles rather than upon hasty impressions.

The rale is well settled that a minor is responsible for compensatory damages resulting from his torts in the same manner as an adult. No court has laid down this rule more positively, than this court in the two cases of Huchting v. Engel, 17 Wis. 230, which was an action for trespass upon real estate, and Vosburg v. Putney, 80 Wis. 523, 50 N. W. 403, which was an action for trespass to the person consisting of' a kick during school hours. Both of these acts were unlawful'acts, and in both cases the liability of an infant for compensatory damages in case of the commission of an unlawful. *91act, even in. the absence of all actual malice or evil intent, was fully sustained. See, also, 1 Cooley, Torts (3d ed.) 177 (*120).

We have no such case liere because the defendant at the time of the injury was doing' strictly a lawful act. The very purpose of the school yard is to allow opportunity for children to play therein, and the more vigorous the exercise which they take during the brief recesses given them the better is the purpose of the school yard subserved. The venerable and exhilarating game of tag in its various forms must have been one of the primal games of the race, and it still occupies an honored place among the sports of childhood. Usually harmless and free from danger to participants and bystanders, it seems not a sport to be discouraged or deprecated, but rather to be encouraged on account of its wholesome activity and stirring of the blood. Certainly we should not wish to do anything which would seem to make it necessary for children to stand about the school yard with folded hands at recess for fear they might negligently brush against one of their fellows and become liable for heavy damages.

So it seems entirely certain that when the accident in question occurred the defendant was engaged in a perfectly lawful and even laudable act, and hence that the principles laid down in the two cases cited have no direct application. But this conclusion does not necessarily determine the case. In■fants may be guilty of actionable negligence, and even though the defendant was engaged in a perfectly lawful occupation he may have conducted himself so negligently as to make himself liable for damages resulting from such negligence. Here, however, comes in the marked difference between the tests of negligence as applied to the act of an adult and the same act when committed by a child. The rule is that a child is only required to exercise that degree of care which the great mass of children of the same age ordinarily exercise under the same circumstances, taking into account the experi*92ence, capacity, and understanding of the child. 2 Cooley, Torts (3d ed.) 1469 (*823); Anderson v. Chicago B. Co. 127 Wis. 273, 106 N. W. 1077; Wade v. C. & N. W. R. Co., post, p. 99, 130 N. W. 890. This was the measure of the •defendant’s duty — no greater and no less.

Calling hack to the mind for a moment the old school yard at recess, its shouts, its laughter, and its confusion, the sudden dash of hoys here and there, the game of marbles in one place, hopscotch in another, and crack the whip- in another, its hoys •darting here and there playing tag or prison goal and intent on catching or escaping from their fellows, can any man truthfully say as he recalls the scene that the ten-year-old defendant in the present case was doing anything more or less than healthy boys of his age have done from time immemorial and will continue to do as long as the race retains its activity •and love of innocent sport ? It seems to us that this question •can receive hut one answer, and that in the negative. The injury here ;was serious and deplorable, hut the severity of it •does not affect the character of the act which caused it, so far as the question of negligence is concerned. If thei*e may be liability for this injury, then it seems that there may be liability for the multitude of trivial injuries which are accidentally inflicted by children on each other in the course of their lawful games. This would open up a new and vast field of personal injury litigation. We decline to act as pioneers in this almost limitless field.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.