This is an appeal by defendants from judgments for damages arising out of a collision between an automobile bread delivery truck and a boy of the age of five years. The cause was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of the boy for $5,000 for personal injuries, and in favor of the boy’s father for $200 for expense in caring for the injured son, on which judgments were entered, that in favor of the father being reduced to *301 the sum of $102.20 at the time motion for new trial was denied. The evidence presents sharp conflicts both as to the place and the manner of the collision. There is evidence tending to show that the defendant driver negligently struck the boy when he was crossing at a regular crosswalk with proper care. There was evidence also tending to show that the boy was struck while negligently running out into the street some distanсe beyond the crosswalk, without negligence on the part of the driver, and there was evidence which warranted the application of the doctrine of the last clear chance. Instructions were given covering all these theories of the accident. The jury rеsolved all conflicts by its verdicts in favor of plaintiffs, and its findings are binding on this court and present a bar to the granting of any relief to appellants, unless it is made to appear that such determination was arrived at upon the basis or as the result of prejudicial errors in law oсcurring at the trial. Such errors are assigned and urged by appellants in respect to certain instructions given by the court, which, in view of the sharp conflict in the evidence, are claimed to be therefore highly prejudicial.
At the trial, the question of contributory negligence оf the boy (plaintiff Charles Carrillo) was raised by the 'answer and was recognized by the court and all parties as being an issue to be submitted to the jury, and the jury was given the usual and approved instructions on that subject. Appellants, however, contend that by the giving of two certain instructions, requested by plaintiffs and characterized by appellants as “formula” instructions, which, it is claimed, failed to contain all the elements essential to a recovery by the minor plaintiff, a conflict was created in the instructions, which was bound to result in prejudice to defendants.
Thе instructions given are not numbered, but if given numbers in the order of their sequence in the transcript there would be 30, and the first in order of giving, complained of by appellants would be numbered 15, reading as follows: “You are further instructed that where an infant of the age of 5 years is suing in his own right, the contributоry negligence, if any, of his parents may not be imputed to him, and if you find from the evidence in this case that the defendants’ negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries to said minor, you will find for the plaintiff
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and against the defendants.” Appellants contend that this instruction is a “formula” instruction and omits the essential element of contributory negligence of the minor plaintiff and therefore false within the condemnation of the general rule of law that a formula instruction must contain all the elements essential to a recovery, and the absence of any one of such elements may not be compensated for nor cured by a reference thereto in other instructions correctly and fully stating the law.
(Ebrite
v.
Crawford,
Immediately following this instruction numbered 15, however, was the following instruction which we have numbered 16: “You are further instructed that contributory negligence is not, as a rule, imputed as a matter of law to a сhild of plaintiff's tender years.” This was later followed by an instruction which we numbered 22, reading as follows: “You are instructed that if you find from the evidence in this case that the defendants were guilty of negligence in the operation of their truck at the time and place of the collisiоn, and that such negligence of the defendants was the proximate cause of the collision, and the proximate cause of the injuries to this minor plaintiff, then you will find for the plaintiff and against the defendants.” Of both these instructions, appellants complain; as to the first on the grоund that its clear effect is to mislead the jury, and as to the second on the ground that it falls under the condemnation of the rule above stated in respect to formula instructions. With both of these contentions we must agree. The instruction numbered 16 entirely fails to state whose or what сontributory negligence is “imputable” to the minor plaintiff. The court had just stated in positive terms that the contributory negligence of a parent might not be imputed to the minor plaintiff, and then followed that by stating that contributory negligence is not as a rule “imputed as a matter of law tо a child of plaintiff’s tender years”. The clear effect of such an instruction would be to lead the jury to understand that a child of plaintiff’s tender years could not as a matter of law be chargeable with contribu
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tory negligence. It was long ago announced and is still maintained by оur appellate courts that there is no. precise age at which, as a matter of law, a child is to be held accountable for all his actions to the same extent as one of full age, and that the question as to the capacity of a child at a particular time to exercise care to avoid a particular danger is one of fact for the jury.
(Cahill
v.
E. B. & A. L. Stone Co.,
As the judgments herein must be reversed on account of this error, and in view of a probable retrial, we 'deem it proper to comment on the error claimed by appellant in respect to an instruction applying the doctrine of the last clear chance, to the end that the error claimed will not be repeated at another trial. The vice of the instruction, which is number 20 in its sequence, is charged to arise out of coupling a statement of the law governing the action of the defendant as well as of the plaintiff in an emergency where great peril of doing injury or of being injured suddenly confronts the respective parties, with a charge embodying the doctrine of the “last clear chance”. The “emergency” clause was evidently given to cover the conduct of the plaintiff and give an аvenue of escape from the effect of the rule of continuous and contributory negligence on his part up to the moment of injury, which would bar recovery on his part. “If all the elements of the last clear chance doctrine are present, and plaintiff’s negligence becomes remote in causation, then this doctrine applies. If any one of the elements of the last clear chance doctrine is absent, then plaintiff’s negligence remains the proximate cause and bars recovery. But the continuous negligencе rule does not apply to a situation in which the last clear chance rule, by presence of its own elements, is brought into operation. When these necessary elements are lacking, courts have declared and rightfully so, that plaintiff’s negligence being continuous аnd contributory with that of a de
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fendant bars a recovery.”
(Girdner
v.
Union Oil Co.,
As we do not apprehend any repetition of errors claimed to exist in other instructions on a retrial, it becomes unnecessary to review and determine such assignments of error in this decision.
The judgments are, and each of them is, reversed.
Stephens, P. J., and Crail, J., concurred.
