104 La. 183 | La. | 1900
Statement op the Case.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this suit alleging herself to be the natural tutrix of the minor Eaymond Henry Campbell.
She averred that on the 10th of July, 1899, at from five to six o’clock p. m., said minor, of tender years, being in the Coliseum Square, a public park or place of this city, in the course of his play went upon the track of the Magazine street line of electric ears, belonging to and operated by the New Orleans City Eailroad Company, when car number five of said Magazine street line, through the gross carelessness of the motorneer, an employee of defendant, ran upon said child, knocked him down and under the car, causing his right heel and leg to be shockingly
That the said injury was due exclusively to the gross carelessness of the defendant company, and particularly of said motorneer, who was not keeping a proper look out so as to see said infant in time to safely stop his car, and so avoid hurting him; that, had said motoneer kept a ■proper- watch and look out, he could and would have seen said child in 'time to avoid an accident.
. That it was her belief and she so charged, that said car was running ■at a high rate of speed, and beyond that which common prudence would justify and beyond what was allowed by the city ordinances; and that, even though negligent in keeping a proper watch ahead and to the side, still, had said .car been going at a slow and proper speed, it might have been cheeked in time, even by ordinary braking, to prevent an injury so very serious as was done to said minor.
That, in such an emergency, the motorneer should have at once reversed the current, and thereby stopped the car, and so saved the child, or at least occasioned to him less grievous, injury, and that said motorneer neglected to reverse the current.
That said motoneer was nqt competent and careful; and she believed and charged that the brakes and appliances of said car were not in good order and condition, and that the incompetency of said motorneer and defectiveness of the brakes and appliances contributed to the injury complained of.
That, under the ordinances of the city of New Orleans, and under the general obligations ’of defendant to safeguard the public, said car should have been provided with a proper fender; that, as a matter of fact, it was not provided with such fender; that the car struck said child standing, and had a proper fender been on the car, he would have been probably thrown away from and clear off the car and track; that, instead, he was knocked down under the car and under the wheels.
, That said minor was. damaged by the action of defendant company in the full sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, being ten thousand dollars for pain and suffering, physical and mental, and fifteen thousand dollars for loss of leg, whereby he was made a cripple for life, and
Defendant answered substantially by a general denial.
During the course of the trial defendant offered as pari of its evidence the record in' the matter of the minor Raymond Henry Campbell, on the docket of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. Plaintiff objected to the offer until some purpose was shown for offering it. Defendant thereafter stated that the suit was brought on behalf of the minor by the plaintiff as tutrix, and the record was offered to show that the proper steps required by law to qualify her as tutrix, had not been taken.
Plaintiff objected to the introduction of the evidence on the grounds:
1st. That it was entirely irrelevant.
2nd. That defendant had not put the question of capacity at issue by an exception filed in limine.
3rd. That the filing of a general denial is a waiver of any objection to the capacity of the party plaintiff.
4th. The defendant had no interest to question here the legality of the appointment by another court of a tutrix to represent this minor child.
5th. Even if defendant had any interest it could not impeach the action of a court of competent jurisdiction appointing the representative of a minor collaterally; that the only manner in which the correctness of the judgment of the court appointing a tutor can be questioned, is by appeal or direct action to annul it.
The court sustained the objection on the ground that an objection to the capacity of the tutrix to sue, must be urged by way of exception before the answer is filed; that the filing of the answer admitted the capacity to sue; that at any rate defendant could be amply protected in the event judgment should be rendered before the payment of the money, to which ruling defendant excepted.
The jury by a vote of nine to three returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against defendant, for five thousand dollars.
Defendant appealed.
Opinion.
This suit is brought by Mrs. Albertine Noamie Labauve, widow of Dennis Campbell, alleging herself to be the natural tutrix of the minor Raymond Henry Campbell, to recover for and in behalf of the minor, damages for personal injuries received by reason, it is claimed, of the negligence of defendant’s employees.
During the trial of the cause defendant objected for the first time that the plaintiff had not taken the proper steps to have authorized her confirmation as tutrix, and she was not authorized to appear in that capacity. The court overruled the objection on the ground that the objection came too late, it having been raised by issue joined on an answer, and that defendant would be still in time, if judgment were rendered against it, prior to payment thereof, to see that the legality of plaintiff’s position as tutrix should have been placed beyond the possibility of doubt.
We think the court’s ruling correct. (See Montford vs. Schmidt, 36 Annual, 750.)
The gravity of the injury received, coupled with the fact that the party suffering the same is a little child, has caused us to examine the testimony in this case with the greatest care. There would be no difficulty as to the law of the case with facts established with certainty, but we have found in the present instance, the same looseness of expression and indefinite ideas as to time and place as is found in nearly every suit for damages for personal injuries, where the persons injured and the objects injuring are moving bodies.
It is no uncommon thing for witnesses in a case like the present, to testify in perfect good faith to certain matters as having occurred several “minutes” after each other and of having taken place ten, fifteen and twenty “feet” of a given place, when it is perfectly manifest to a court critically examining the whole that seconds should have been substituted for minutes and inches for feet. There is no class of actions where correct conclusions as to the legal consequences of acts are so dependent upon exact time and exact place of occurrences as that involving railroad accidents. The evidence shows that between five and six o’clock of the afternoon of the 10th of July, 1899, five children of
Neither the extent of the injury nor the fact that it was received by the child’s having been run over by one of defendant’s cars operated by its employees is disputed. The issue for decision is whether the injury was the result of negligence on the part of the employees giving rise to legal liability for damages by the defendant. We leave out of view any question of contributory negligence on the part of the child itself.
The park in the city of New Orleans known as Coliseum Square is an irregular body of land bounded on the side next to the Mississippi river by a walk fourteen feet wide covered by Schillinger paving; adjoining this walk and nearer still to the river was a space of ten feet running parallel to the walk which is sodded with grass and having trees at different intervals in the centre of the same.
At the outer edge of this grass plot is a curbing forming the inner or what is known as the “wood” side (or line) of Camp street. The defendant has two lines of track upon Camp street. The rail of the track next to the square is at a distance of a little over two feet from the cuibing we have just referred to, so that the distance from the edge of the square proper to the front rail is a little over twenty-six feet. Coliseum Square is itself sodded with grass and in the square about ten feet from the Schillinger walk are a line of small trees and benches. On the afternoon in question an old gentleman by the name of Middleton was seated on one of the benches when these children going into the square seated themselves by him. They soon left him, however, going to another bench which was some distance below and nearer Canal street and possibly a little further back from Camp street than that on which Middleton was sitting.
Some of the children commenced playing a game called “catcher,” which it seems called for a good deal of running about, but whether the youngest child, Raymond, took part in this game, at any time, does not' appear. He finally found his way to the railroad track and was run over as stated.
Eva Campbell, the oldest of the children, a girl sixteen years of age, testified that she was present on the occasion when a car of the Magazine line injured her brother; she was near the Camp street Side in the square; she gave a description of the Schillinger walk; the grass plot beyond and the situation of the car tracks. She testified that she was (at the time) about five feet from the Schillinger walk (referred to frequently by the witnesses as the “culvert”), that she had her little sister Mollie with her, also her brothel’s Albert, Victor and Raymond; 'that they were all playing at first in the portion of the square lying between Terpsichore and Robin streets (the former being the street nearer Canal than Robin street) and a little nearer Robin than Terpsichore.
Being asked to explain to the court how her brother happened to get in front of the car — how it hurt him, and everything she saw, she said he was running after a butterfly and he had just put his foot on the track when the motorman hallooed to him and he got frightened and the ear struck his head; the board under the car, way under the wheels. Her brother was in the square when he first saw the butterfly up in the tree, and when it flew away from the tree it flew toward the track and he followed it; he went up town; she heard the motorneer halloa and he was struck by the car; she heard the motorneer halloo a few minutes before he was hit; the car was about ten feet from him when she heard the motorneer halloo; about ten feet; her brother was in the track; that was the first halloo she heard; the child was standing when he was struck and he fell down; the child was running slowly up towards Robin street up town and towards the track; he did not run very fast, he was keeping up with the butterfly.
Being’ asked what first called her attention to the fact that her brother was in danger she answered: “Well, she was watching him.” The question was repeated, and she answered: “Well, the motorneer hallooed to him.” Being asked whether she first knew of her brother’s being in danger by the motorneer’s hallooing, she answered: “No, the car was coming so fast he did not have time to get oif the track, but the
She was playing on the ground before her brother began to chase the butterfly; she was on the “wood” side of the “culvert” (the Schillinger walk) about the middle of the square, but nearer Robin street; one or two houses above Dr. Levy’s' house on Gamp street. The car was going up town from Oanal street up to Qkrrollton (on the track next to Coliseum Square) ; there were other children playing in the square.
Before passing to other testimony it will be noticed that this' witness, who was the oldest of the children, if not specially in charge of them, places herself at the time of the accident, about five feet inside the square and next the Schillinger walk or the culvert; that she was watching- her brother; that she did not discover he was in any danger until he got upon the track and made no attempt to check or stop his doing so; and that whatever did occur was not a matter of “several minutes.” As she stated, he was chasing a butterfly and in doing so running up town “slantingly” towards the track, but she does not attempt to fix the degree of the slant, nor show that it indicated that the child was about to cross over even to the Schillinger walk, still less to and across the grass plot beyond and over on to the track, and we shall see later by Middleton’s testimony that the child’s course was not such as to give rise to alarm or any apprehension. It was only at the last when he' made a direct turn towards the track that any one would or could have anticipated danger.
Victor Campbell, a child of eight years and brother of the injured boy, was placed upon the stand. His testimony was that he was present
He was about ten feet from the culvert. His brother first saw the butterfly in a tree, it flew from the tree going uptown, it flew the same way his brother ran, his brother followed it slanting uptown, his brother was not running fast, only walking fast. Witness did not himself chase the butterfly. Just before his brother saw the butterfly the other children were playing catcher, but not with his brother; he was sitting on the bench.
Witness stopped playing when his brother started to run after , the butterfly; his brother called to him: “Vic, I see a butterfly up in the tree,” and chunked at it, and witness stopped playing and watched him run after the butterfly; witness did not run after it himself. He first knew his brother was in danger when the motorneer hallooed.
There was an old gentleman sitting there on the bench; witness did not hear him tell him not to run towards the track; the bench where the old gentleman was sitting was pretty near to where they were playing; they were playing further uptown than Dr. Levy’s house, the bench is fur (her uptown, he did not know how much. His brother ran about ten feet — from the time his brother started until he got run over he ran about ten feet.
The children were in the square — not on the Schillinger walk, they were near a bench in the square and his brother started to run from there towards uptown and the track; the tree was right at the bench, the bench was leaning against the tree.
Beauvais, one of the witnesses, was a passenger in the car which ran over the child; he occupied one of the front seats of the car on the side next the square, and was looking out of the window. He said there was no difficulty in approaching the place where the accident occurred, in seeing ahead. There were a few trees, but they would not obstruct the view; there was a clear view before coming to the spot.
On cross-examination witness said that shortly after the car left Terpsichore street he was looking ahead and saw a child.
Q. — You saw a child on the track, did you say?
A. — Yes, sir; he started to cross the track.
Q. — At a distance that you judge to be about ninety feet from the car?
A. — I thought that was about it — I never measured the distance.
Q. — Then the motorneer began to sound his gong and to put on the brakes ?
A. — Yes.
Q. — Just as soon as he became aware that the child was not going to get off the track he did his best to stop the car ?
A. — Yes.
Q. — When he rang the bell, instead of that making him get off the track it frightened him ? It caused him to stop ?
A. — Yes, I think it frightened him, he remained perfectly still until the car struck him. ,
Q. — The hoy was struck just above Dr. Levy’s house?
A. — I believe just two doors above.
Q. — Which way was the boy running?
Q. — Right across it at right angles? *
A. — Yes, started in the direction of Dr. Levy’s house — that is just across the street.
Q. — Were you looking right straight ahead?
A. — Yes.
Q. — And the first time you saw this boy running was when he started to cross the track?
A. — Yes. '
Q. — Now he (the motorneer) stopped the car almost immediately after striking the boy?
■ A. — Yes, within a few feet.
Q. — He made a very good stop ?
A.' — I don’t know what you mean by a good stop. I suppose he v stopped as quick as he could.
Re-dired.
Q. — You state that- he did not put the brakes on full until he was almost upon the child — when did he put the brakes on full?
A. — I said he put the brakes on when he thought the child was not going to get off the track, and I judged that to be a very short distance before striking the child.
McWhirter, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, was a passenger in the car but seated on the opposite side from the accident. His attention was first attracted by the putting on violently of the brakes and the screaming, the next moment, of the child. It was done almost in a moment; there was no difficulty in seeing the square for some distance approaching it; there were some trees on the grass strip which lies between the culvert (the Schillinger walk) and the street; witness did not think the car had gotten under full headway yet; would not say the car was running at unusual speed, heard the gong_ ring.
Switzer, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, was a passenger in the car, was preoccupied at the time, was startled by the furious ringing of the bell, looked up — saw - the child, from the waist up, in front of the car, he saw the car strike him, saw the motorneer put on his brakes at the time, and heard him say “too late — too late!” It could not have been more than a second from the time he saw the child until he was struck.
Marion, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, was also a passenger in the ear, seated on the side next the square; when the car got near the corner of
Haney, a witness for plaintiff, was a passenger in the car, did not see the accident, heard the excitement of voices, looked up — saw the motorneer putting on the brakes, he seemed very active. After the accident, stepped off the distance from where he first saw blood on the track to where the ear had stopped, and the child was released from the car; that was thirteen steps, he judged about twenty feet, there was not a trail of blood all along but blood at different paces, he could not say it was from where the child was hurt — he did not see where the child was hurt.
The first witness placed on the stand by the defendant was Middleton, the old gentleman who has been already referred to as sitting on a bench in the square at the time of the accident. After staling that fact he said he saw the children, they were sitting on the same bench he was occupying, but they got up and went further back and took another bench to play on; further downtown.
A few moments after they occupied the other bench, this little boy that got crippled strayed off, at least ran away from his playmates; he started to cross the track and I hallooed to him and told him to come back; that the car would run over him, and he ran sort of diagonally across the track, and when witness hallooed to him he was right on the track. He supposed the child did not hear him, but something or other seemed to attract his attention and he started back, and when he got about the centre of the track he stopped perfectly still, and seemed to be bewildered, and then the car was right on him. When the child started to cross the track he was running.
The motorman rang Ms gong the first thing and put on his brakes, with his left hand; he seemed to be putting on the brakes with both hands, but just before the ear struck the child, he had his right hand loose with his left hand on the motor — on the brake, and the front wheels were sliding and he grabbed for the child. At the time he grabbed for the child witness grabbed for it; when the child fell he fell on his face.
It could not have been over two lengths of the ear when the boy started to cross the track, thirty to forty feet as nigh as he could judge, he
The bench on which witness was sitting was very close to the culvert, it could not have been more than eight or ten feet. The children were hot playing at the time of the accident, around him. When he sat down on the bench they were playing on that bench, but they all moved further downtown to another bench. They all went down, it could not have been over a hundred feet from one bench to the other, as far as he could judge; in a sort of oblong way, on a line parallel to the bench on which he was sitting.
The boy came and sat on the bench which witness was occupying for a moment, and then he broke off and ran to the bench where the other children were playing, and then he ran back, and stopped a second or two at the bench on which witness was sitting, and he broke right away and ran across the track.
The bench on which witness was sitting was about ten feet from the culvert as near as witness could judge.
Plaintiff's Counsel—
Q.- — You say he started diagonally toward Robin street? — in this sort of a direction, and he only stopped a second or two at the bench at which you were sitting?
A. — He only stopped for a moment and then ran off.
Q. — And then it was practically one run — was it not?
A. — Yes, you could call it one run.
Q. — From the bench below you a hundred feet off which was practically one run?
A. — He checked up for a second or two on the bench where I was seated and then broke off and ran across the track.
Q. — And that was practically no interruption to his run?
A. — No. !
Q. — And then he went directly in a diagonal direction from where you were sitting towards the track?
A. — Yes.
Being asked questions concerning the car witness said he first saw' the car at the street below (Terpsichore street) ; didn’t know whether it checked up, but it seemed to come to a little stop; he noticed it begin to check up when the gong rang, about thirty to forty feet from the child
The motorneer put on his brake fast and strong, he could swear to that; he did all he could to stop the car; witness followed the child right up and helped to take the child out. Witness was sitting on the bench when lie hallooed to the child, the distance from the bench to the centre of the track — called to him when he started to cross the track .and told him to come back; that the car would run over him, and he ran sort of right on the track.
Witness did not move from the bench until he called and he (the child) seemed to be perfectly bewildered, and then witness ran as fast as he could, for an old man of his age, and put his hands on him. Witness did not have time to put his hands on him before the car struck him; it struck him before he got to him; witness wagj within eight or ten feet of him when he was struck.
Asked when first he saw the child was in danger he answered: that he saw the child was in danger as soon as the gong rang. As soon as the gong rang he saw the child was in danger, that was about thirty or forty feet off — the car dragged or pushed the child ahead a little, from four to eight feet he should judge; the motorneer put his brake forty-feet or somewhere about that before he struck the child.
Reams, a witness for the defense, was a passenger in the car, seated on the side next the square; he testified that he first saw two boys running across the square, one was a little taller than the little fellow that was run over, and they clasped hands running across the square, and the little fellow broke away from the elder boy and had crossed the track and was pretty near the centre between the two tracks, when he probably got excited at something, and started to run back toward the square.
The motorman put on the brake and stopped the car, but it was too late; he shut off the power and put on the brakes as. quick as he was able and tried to avoid the accident — that was his opinion. The boys were running toward the track, they did not stop — they kept right on running and the little fellow broke away from the elder boy and proceeded to cross the track; witness thought there was, in the meantime, a wagon coming down and he (the child) turned back. The wagon
Plaintiff’s Counsel—
Q. — You saw it very plainly and the motorman could have seen it without any trouble, if he had been looking ahead?
A. — I don’t know if he could.
Q. — And this little boy was coming across the track, and when he saw this wagon coming he got frightened and turned back?
A. — Yes.
Q. — You have been giving your opinion that the motorneer could have seen it if he was not blind, and was looking ahead?
A. — Yes.
Q. — If the boy had gone on would he not have been run over by the ice wagon ?
A. — I suppose so. The boy was in front of the ear crossing when I first saw the wagon.
The witness testified that the car stopped at Melpomene street and continued on its way up; that the motorneer saw the boys running towards the track; he put on the brakes also- and slackened up the speed of the ear, and when he had slackened up the speed he put che power on again and continued on his way up. He thought probably the road was clear.
This witness had been examined as a witness on a preliminary examination of the motorneer, Larmieu, before the First City Criminal Court, charged with assault and battery in having run over the child. On that occasion he testified that the boys were running, across the street between Terpsichore and Robin streets. One of the boys was much taller than this little boy, and the motorneer saw him coming along and he cheeked his car up in front of the church, and as he saw the boy had stopped on the grass plot in the square, in front of Dr. Levy’s residence, he stopped there for a moment and then he started off again, and with that the little fellow broke away from his friend, and ran on in front of the ear.
There was a cry and a shout in the car, and a wagon was coming down the street, and in the excitement he noticed the wagon and ran back, and ran in front of the car.
The counsel of defendant who had a copy of this testimony in his possession, read from it in court, calling his attention to differences be
On cross-examination by plaintiff’s attorney the witness said he saw distinctly between Melpomene and Terpsichore streets the group of children in the square; the motorneer could have seen them had he been looking in .that direction; witness saw two children cross the square, they ran hand in hand across the square, starting from the centre of the square near the fountain, they had their hands joined when he first saw them — about twenty feet from the fountain; they ran hand in hand directly towards the track until they1 came to the grass strip between the culvert and the railroad track, and there they parted hands.
The car was then ten feet away, the car had come up to within ten feet of the boys, who had hands elapsed when they turned loose their hands and ran across the track; the little fellow jerked himself loose and kept right on, and the other boy remained on the side of the track; the ear was running at a very slow gait; the motorneer, he supposes, did not put on the brake until he actually struck the child; the boys were three feet from the track and the car was ten feet away; the little boy kept on running across the track and he turned back and was struck by the car.
Skofield, the conductor of the ear, testified that just above Terpsichore street he gave the signal to stop at Robin street to let Mr. Strouss get out; he did not notice anything until he felt the tightening of the brakes, all of a sudden, and the car all of a sudden came to a sudden stop; it was a good stop, could not have been made better by any one else; the car after it stopped, was backed about a foot to extricate the child and keep it from getting hurt by the life guard.
The motorneer put on the brakes when witness gave him the signal; he felt the application of the brakes and he thought he was slackening up for the corner, and then the car stopped instantly, the car went on about the distance of about fifty feet after he had given the signal, before the brakes were put on quick and fast.
Strouss testified that he had touched the bell to put him off at Robin street and was walking back in the car to get out, when the accident happened; he heard the conductor ring the bell in answer to his buiton call, the motorneer started to slacken up when witness rang the bell,
The testimony of Larmieu, the motorneer, was to the effect that as the ear reached Terpsichore street, he got a bell to stop at Robin street. When he got the bell he turned off the current and checked up the slack of. the brake; when he was about the middle of the square two boys ran from behind the trees; the oldest boy was in the lead and the youngest came right behind him — about five feet; witness halloed to them and the oldest boy managed to get back when he hallooed, but the little fellow did not; witness checked up the brake but it was too late; the car was right on top of him, he made a good stop; when he hit the little fellow the car went thirty or forty feet. Witness (the car) was ten feet from the children when they came on the track ahead of the car; they came from the woods side running towards the river, from the square. Witness was looking straight ahead at the time. The trees he spoke of that the boys came from behind were trees right close to tho track, between Terpsichore and Robin streets. ,
Witness, in answer to a question on cross-examination whether when he passed Coliseum Square he kept looking ahead all the time, said “Yes,” and the question being repeated: “never looked across the square?” replied: “I was looking straight ahead”. Being told that it had been shown by the testimony in this case that this group of Campbell children were in the square, and asked whether he had seen them, he said that he had not, it must have been the trees that kept him from seeing them. The first witness saw of the children (tho two referred to in his testimony) was when they came from behind the trees on the strip of grass between the culvert and the street proper, on a run; “he no more than saw them than they were on the track;” the first thing he saw was the two children running on the strip of grass.
Just as soon as witness got the bell to stop he began to put on the brake, he shut off the current and took up the slack of the brake; the talcing up of the slack does not put the brake on of any consequence; the braking proper hard and fast he put on just as the child was starting on the track, the child was about ten feet ahead on the track when he put the brake on; the ear came to a full stop in between thirty-five and forty feet, the child was dragged some, the car was going at a pretty fair speed. Witness first saw the little boy who was injured
After considering the whole testimony in this case, of which the extracts which have been recited are the most important, we are satisfied that the appliances of the car were such as they should have been, that the motorneer made every possible exertion to stop the car from the time the child commenced crossing to the track from the green on the outer edge of the culvert, and that it was, in point of fact, stopped just as quickly as it was possible to do so with the car running at the rate it was. The crucial questions in the case are — was the rate of speed at which the car was moving too great, in view of its passing a public park, or under the circumstances of this particular ease; and second — • Did the motorman see the child and its danger as soon as proper diligence required, and care called for his seeing him.
Counsel of plaintiff insists that the motorman was guilty of gross negligence in looking as he says “straight to the front”; that prudence and care required that in passing a public square, he should look equally to the sides. We think he holds the motorman down too strictly in his use of the words, he was “looking straight to the front”. He obviously meant the field of vision taken in and included in an ordinary view and he so explained himself, for in answer to the question— whether, when he was looking straight ahead, he could not see to some distance on either side, he answered “Yes.” (See Sciortens vs. Crescent City Railroad Co., 49th Ann. 7, on this point.)
One of the most frequent complaints brought against motorneers is that they are looking to the side instead of towards the front as they should. As to the speed of the car, there is no evidence whatever of its having been run below Terpsichore street (or in fact anywhere) at an unusual or improper rate, and the testimony is that just after leaving Terpsichore street the motorman threw off the current and took up the slack of the brake, not, it is true, as a matter of precaution against possible accidents from passing a public square, but because of the signal given for the putting off of a passenger at the next street (Eobin street).
The fact itself of the slacking up of the speed of the car by the turning off of the current, and not the particular motive or occasion for this being done is what we have to consider here. • It is true that the taking in of the slack of the brake did not carry with it, it is said, any ma
We have now to direct our attention to the contention urged that the motorman did not see the child as quickly as he should; plaintiff claims that he made a continuous slanting run of over sixty feet towards the track, that .the motorman should have seen him from the starting point, and had he followed him with his eyes he would have seen immediate prospective peril and danger, but we do not understand the evidence as plaintiff does; it is quite true that the child ran some distance uptown, that is to say, from the second bench to which the children had gone, and the upper bench where Middleton was sitting, but this course was almost parallel to the Schillinger pavement and would give rise in no one to an apprehension that the child would turn to the left, cross the culvert and the grass strip beyond on to ttie track, and this is what he seems to have done. He ran from the lower to the upper bench, stopped there for a moment and then ran across the culvert and grass strip to the track.
We do not think that prior to this action there was any ground for suspicion that he would turn and go upon the track. Neither his sister Eva, nor his brother Albert seems to have entertained any fear on that score, and when the child did turn to the left he moved so quickly and the distance was so short that Middleton did not appreciate the danger until the child got actually upon the track.
We do not think we would be justified in putting the danger point back of the turning of the child to the left from Middleton’s bench, and we do not think there was anything in the situation even then which was calculated to have directed the attention of the motorman at once to the possible action which the child would take thereafter. There is a portion of the evidence which has perplexed us not a little. It is the introduction into the drama of a second boy by Beauvais, Reems and Larmieu. No other witnesses refer to him. Who he could be we can not imagine unless it was. the child’s brother Albert, who for some reason was not placed upon the stand. We leave him entirely out in reaching our conclusions.
We think that the motorman acted as promptly as he could under the circumstances and that this ease shows one of those deplorable and distressing accidents which as to legal consequences are controlled by
In the first, mentioned case we said: “The car was being driven slowly — the driver had his hand upon the brake prepared to act as soon as anything should arise calling for action.
“It would be utterly unreasonable to exact that the mere presence of a child of five or six years old upon the sidewalk or banquette with a basket upon her arm, should force the driver of a street car to come to a dead halt upon the bare possibility that it would leave the place it was then occupying securely to either walk or run suddenly into danger * * * We can not say, under the evidence, that he did not act as promptly as the occasion called for. ‘ There was certainly little time for action.”
The same remarks find application here. The facts of this ease differ from those in Barnes vs. Railroad, 47 Ann. 1224, and Rice vs. Railroad, 51 Ann. 114, and Nelson vs. Railroad, 49 Ann. 499.
We can not permit our sympathy to control our judgment. We have no alternative hut to reverse the judgment. For the reasons assigned, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the verdict of the jury be set aside and the judgment of the court thereon rendered be and the same is hereby annulled, avoided and reversed, and plaintiff’s demand rejected and her suit dismissed.
Rehearing refused.