Both parties have treated the law applicable to the foregoing facts as though this court has embraced that body of law frequently referred to by the name of turntable cases, the pioneer of which was
Lynch
v.
Nurdin,
1 Q. B. 113 (Eng. Reprints, 1041), and which first received serious attention when the federal Supreme Court announced its decision in
Sioux City P. R. Co.
v.
Stout,
Since the doctrine of the turntable cases found its way into some units of our American jurisprudence, the analysis and criticism which it has received from courts and writers has revealed both weakness and strength in the doctrine. The very fact that it has survived the criticism and found its way into the law of a very large number of jurisdictions is quite persuasive that its foundation is something more substantial than the court’s sympathy for an injured child. But the criticism of the doctrine has shown to many courts the wisdom of limiting the application of the doctrine more stringently than the first decisions indicated. Thus the federal Supreme Court has very recently said:
“ * * but the doctrine needs very careful statement not to make an unjust and impracticable requirement. * * But the principle, if accepted, must be very cautiously applied.”
United Zinc & Chemical Co.
v.
Van Britt,
The fallacy of the invitation fiction which originally was the backbone of the doctrine has been quite fully revealed. For instance, suppose that the child who has responded to the so-called invitation to come and play should carry away the attractive instrumentality after having played with it, and is now *266 being sued for conversion, or is being prosecuted by the state; or let us suppose that this act has seriously injured the object, and that he is being sued for damages, — would the so-called invitation become defensive matter in such a case? We do not believe for a moment that any court would carry the doctrine to such length, for the very excellent reason that no invitation in fact existed. Some time ago Judge Jeremiah Smith very clearly pointed out that temptation is not the equivalent of invitation: 11 Harvard Law Review, 349. Some courts which have refused to accept the fiction of the invitation have undertaken to create another fiction, that is, that a child cannot be a trespasser. Upon reflection, this would seem to be an equally unsatisfactory basis for the doctrine. Other courts have sought to rest the doctrine upon the rule sic utere two wt alienwm non laedas, but Judge Smith points out that this is an' unsound foundation for the doctrine. Among other weaknesses pointed out by him is that the maxim just quoted refers only to acts the effect of which extend beyond the limits of the property.
If we are to accept the doctrine at all, it would, seem far better to treat the facts as they actually come to us and not to veil them by an application of a fiction. It would seem to us that a child that enters upon the property of another without an express invitation is like an adult, a trespasser, and that some children at least are capable of becoming trespassers. But it does not necessarily follow that his status as a trespasser must necessarily deprive him of relief. There are instances recognized in the law, where the owner of real property is liable to a trespasser for an injury inflicted:
Ruocco
v.
United Advertising Corp.,
This doctrine was first applied in this country in
Sioux City P. R. Co.
v.
Stout,
where the defendant placed near a highway a turntable. At a slight expense it could have rendered the turntable stationary when not in use. Upon the occasion in question some children moved the turntable and one of them was injured. Since the announcement of the decision in that case, other plaintiffs have endeavored to per
*268
suade the courts to apply the rule to a vast variety of objects; some of them were near highways and public places; others were not; some have been mechanical like a turntable; others have been piles of lumber; in some of them the expense of applying the precautions alleged by the plaintiff would have been great; in other instances, like that of the
Sioux City P. R. Co.
v.
Stout
case, the expense would have been slight. In these several hundred cases which have come to the courts following
Sioux City P. R. Co.
v.
Stout,
the allurements described in the complaint have covered the full range from a cotton-gin to a maiden girl. See 36 A. L. R. 34 and
Johnson
v.
Atlas Supply Co.
(Tex. Civ. App.),
“Here we have the doctrine of the turntable cases carried to its natural and logical result. We have only to add that every man who leaves a wheelbarrow or a lawn mower or a spade upon his lawn; a rake, with its sharp teeth pointing upward, upon the ground or leaning against a fence; a bed of mortar prepared for use in his new house; a wagon in his barnyard, upon which children may climb, and from which they may fall; or who turns in his lot a kicking horse or a cow with calf — does so at the risk of having the question of his negligence left to a sympathetic jury. How far does the rule go? Must his barn door, and the usual apertures through which the accumulations of the stables are thrown, be kept locked and fastened, lest twelve-year-old boys get in and be hurt by the animals, or by climbing into the haymow and falling from beams? May a man keep a ladder, or a grindstone, or a scythe, or a plow, or a *269 reaper, without danger of being called upon to reward trespassing children, whose parents owe and may be presumed to perform the duty of restraint? Does the new rule go still further, and make it necessary for a man to fence his gravel pit or quarry? And, if so, will an ordinary fence do, in view of the known propensity and ability of boys to climb fences ? Can a man nowadays safely own a small lake or fishpond? And must he guard ravines and precipices upon his land? Such is the evolution of the law, less than thirty years after the decision of Sioux City, etc., B. Co. v. Stout, when with due deference, we think some of the courts left the solid ground of the rule that trespassers cannot recover for injuries received, and due merely to negligence of the persons trespassed upon.”
In
Uthermohlen
v.
Bogg’s Run Min. & Mfg. Co.,
“That statement is very broad, as it includes any dangerous thing which in nature has a tendency to attract the childish instinct of children to play with it. It is not confined to machinery. Where do we stop under this head? If machinery, what does it include? In these days of machinery, when it has so largely released the hands of man, the rule of dangerous and attractive machinery would be comprehensive. WThat things would be deemed dangerous under the rule above quoted from Thompson? What machinery would be dangerous? Almost all machinery is, in some conceivable circumstances or contingencies, dangerous. Surely we cannot deny an owner’s use of his property by denying to him machinery and appliances that may, under some circumstances, be dangerous. But the thing doing the injury must also be attractive to children. Where do we stop under this head? When we go to say what machinery is attractive to some child, or even to children, we enter upon a wide, uncertain field. Under this rule the *270 owner of land must infallibly judge in advance what is a machine or appliance both dangerous and attractive, on pain of suffering heavy damages. What a constant menace to ownership of real estate! What an infringement upon dominion over private property! It is in a sense, and in no small degree, a taking of private property, because it detracts from the freedom of its use.”
The above situation has caused many courts to limit the application of the doctrine to instrumentalities which are generally considered as dangerous. Thus in
Branan
v.
Wimsatt,
54 App. D. C. 374 (
“In our opinion, the rule announced in the Turntable Cases is inapplicable to property not per se dangerous, or peculiarly alluring or attractive to children, and excludes minors who have reached the age of discretion, or who, knowing the hazard, assume the risk of doing that which will imperil their lives or limbs.”
And the court held that a lumber-yard “was not an attractive nuisance or
per se
dangerous.” In
Brown
v.
Salt Lake City,
“We are constrained to hold, therefore, that the doctrine of the turntable cases should be applied to all things that are uncommon and are artificially produced, and which are attractive and alluring to children of immature judgment and discretion, and are inherently dangerous, and where it is practical to guard them without serious inconvenience and without great expense to the owner.”
And in Johnson v. Atlas Supply Co., supra, we find:
“As indicated, however, by our Supreme Court in
San Antonio & N. P. Ry. Co.
v.
Morgan,
Whenever this court has dealt with situations analogous to those of the turntable cases, it has used similar expression. For instance in
Riggle
v.
Lens,
“ # * The great majority of the cases upon this point hold that the landowner is liable only for accidents occurring on his land by reason of dangerous, unguarded machinery, permitted or created by him, or some concealed, dangerous condition thereon that is attractive to children whereby they may be injured; otherwise he is not liable.”
In Hill v. Tualatin Academy, supra, the defendants had placed upon the college grounds a gopher gun which this court found to be a dangerous instrumentality. In Riggle v. Lens, supra, the attractive object which brought the child upon the defendant’s premises was a mill-race located near the public street; in Cooper v. North Coast Power Co., supra, the allurement was a tree from which the defendant *272 had chopped the top; immediately overhead was a transmission wire. One should take notice, however, that the tree was not on property owned by the defendant. In Fisher v. Burrell, supra, the allurement was an excavating process carried on upon the property of the defendant in connection with which explosions took place from time to time. In Haynes v. Oregon-Washington R. & N. Co., supra, the allurement was a cave; there was no recovery.
It is true that in
Macdonald
v.
O’Reilly,
Accepting the foregoing as the basis of the doctrine, that is, that a child was in fact a trespasser but that the defendant had good reason to know of his presence, we hold that it is necessary that the plaintiff should prove that the defendant placed upon his property an instrumentality that was both attractive and also dangerous, and that this object did in fact allure the child to its dangerous position.
Let us revert back to the facts of our case; they show that the defendant placed some ties in piles in regular order; the ties were of a dark color, approximately three or 350 feet from the depot, within five feet of a barbed wire fence that marked the bound *273 ary line of the right of way; if the doctrine applies to such objects thus placed, are we in a position to say that it also applies to boxes, lumber, rocks, rails and other objects which from time to time the owner has need to place one on top of the other?
“If he is held to liability for injury to the children of Jones because of the way he piles his lumber, by the same token, as to Brown, liability would be fastened on him for the way he piles his stones, his bricks, his corn in pens, his hay ricks and his cord wood on private grounds — in fact, as has been pointedly said, every land owner will be liable for injuries to his neighbor’s children under the new doctrine except the neighbor himself. We can not well write the law that way.”
Kelley
v.
Sonas,
We all know that almost the first object that a child comes in contact with when his hands have acquired a little deftness are building blocks; he thus early learns that they may tumble down one upon the other. Authorities are not lacking to the effect that the attractive instrumentality rule does not apply to such common objects as rocks, lumber and ties, when piled one on the other. In
Sandstrom
v.
Minnesota, St. P. & S. Ste. M. R. Co.,
In this case the boy was not allured from his home by the pile of ties; he left the hotel just before supper-time to call his playmate, and even after reaching the vicinity of the ties they were not sufficiently attractive to bring him to them at once, but he played around some rails first, then according to Jack Holst, he walked around a little and finally went over to the tie pile. Numerous authorities hold that it is not sufficient to merely show that the defendant had upon his premises an attractive, dangerous object, but the plaintiff must prove that the object allured the child to a place of danger. In the present case when Howard left the depot grounds in pursuit of Jack, he went upon the defendant’s property without its consent. In
United Zinc & Chemical Co.
v.
Van Britt,
“In the case at bar it is at least doubtful whether the water could be seen from any place where the children lawfully were and there is no evidence that it was what led them to enter the land. But that is necessary to start the supposed duty.”
x In the case before us Howard was a trespasser or licensee, and yet even after he had gone some distance from the depot the allurement of the tie pile had not begun to assert itself. If the law should regard such a common object as a pile of ties an attractive nuisance it would lead to vexatious and oppressive litigation and impose upon owners a burden of vigilance and care which would materially impair the value of property and seriously cripple owners in making beneficial use of the property. To illustrate the full force of this observation, one need only consider for a moment the considerable variety of articles the defendant had upon its premises. For instance, there were some large concrete pipes upon the defendant’s property which it proposed to use as culverts at some future time; the boys played with these on some occasions; an employee of the defendant testified that he warned the boys against playing with them and drove them off. The boys also climbed on the roof of the station-house; an employee of the defendant testified he drove them off of that place. In addition there were cars, engines, sunken tracks, elevated tracks, coal chutes and other objects of like character. Would it have been necessary for *277 the defendant to guard and protect this assortment of objects which might cause injury to a child? The courts have well said that no one yet has been able to build a fence which a boy cannot surmount. How helpless a defendant would be if all these objects were attractive nuisances is well portrayed in the testimony in this case; a number of defendant’s witnesses testified they had warned the plaintiff and other boys and had “fired them off the property”; the plaintiff’s witnesses denied all of this. The defendant’s witnesses testified that they had erected four trespass signs which were intended to warn people to keep off the right of way. They brought with them blueprints showing exactly how these signs were constructed; the plaintiff’s witnesses testified they had never seen these signs. Anyone who has ever seen a watchman or a caretaker attempt to drive off of property a group of active, mischievous boys knows what a difficult, if not impossible, task he has undertaken; indeed, the watchman becomes in a truthful sense an attractive nuisance himself, and the more earnest his efforts become the larger in number become the group of boys.. A week before the fatal accident Howard’s mother called him home when he was seated upon the pile of ties; she testified she called him not because of the ties, but because she thought the work being prosecuted near by might injure him. The evidence does not disclose that children had found the tie pile an attraction, nor that the defendant was aware that its method of piling ties was dangerous to children. Under the circumstances and in harmony with what we believe is almost the unanimous trend of authority, we are of the opinion that a pile of ties of the type described in the evi *278 dence could not have been an attractive instrumentality.
In
Lange
v.
St. Johns Lumber Co.,
‘ ‘ There is a difference between one present on premises by an invitation, express or implied, and one who is merely there by permission or toleration. The one is termed an invitee and the other mere licensee. As to the former, the owner of the premises is bound to use reasonable care to prevent the infliction of hurt upon the invitee:
Keeran
v.
Spurgeon Mercantile Co.,
Below the depot hotel building there were no houses, stores or anything except the defendant’s tracks, equipment and structures for the maintenance of its engines. Howard had no business of any kind that required his presence in the vicinity of the scene of the accident. Under the circumstances Howard’s status upon the occasion in question could not have been anything other than a licensee or a trespasser. In
Rathbone
v.
Oregon R. Co.,
“One who uses the track or right of way for his own convenience or pleasure, without the permission or invitation of the company, occupies the position of a mere trespasser. The company is under no legal dnty or obligation to take precautions or keep a lookout for him, its only duty being to use reasonable care not to injure him after he is discovered.”
And in
Long
v.
Pacific Ry. &
Nav. Co.,
*279 “ * * The evidence for plaintiff in the case at bar shows that the right of way of the defendant was used by residents of that vicinity as a walkway for foot travel. How long this use had prevailed does not appear. Certainly it had not been continued long enough for the public to acquire a right by prescription to use the right of way for that purpose. It is a matter of common knowledge that such rights of way and the tracks are commonly used by foot-passengers wherever they are more convenient than the ways constructed by public authorities. It goes without saying that snch use is not desired or encouraged by the railway authorities, but merely suffered because of the difficulties of preventing it. Such use is never of any advantage to the transportation companies, bnt is a disadvantage • and fre-. quently a source of danger and annoyance; and at best, under the testimony, the deceased was a bare licensee to whom the company owed no duty beyond that of abstaining from any wilful injury.”
Defendant did not injure him wilfully or wantonly. Since the boy was a trespasser or at best a licensee, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur could have no application; indeed, it could not apply to a pile of ties. The lower court should have allowed the motion for a directed verdict; its judgment will therefore be reversed. Reversed.
