Opinion by
These are appeals by a minor plaintiff and his parents from the grant of a new trial, the sole reason given by the court below being that it had committed an error of law in its charge.'
We have frequently repeаted the rule regarding a reversal of the award of a new trial. A recent pronouncement is
Held, Admrx., v. Van Tiggelen et al.,
The scope of the present review, therefore, is whether the trial judge did commit an error of law in his charge.
The facts are as follows: On the morning of October 27, 1945, minor plaintiff, a child of eight years of age, was playing on the sidewalk with several other children, at the corner of Rose Street and Edson Avenue, in Johnstown. Defendant was driving his truck, loaded with coal, in а northwesterly direction along Rose Street towards Edson Avenue, which intersects Edson Avenue at a right angle. According to defendant’s testimony, he stopped at the stop sign on Rose Street and proceedеd around the corner in a northeasterly direction into and along Edson Avenue. The minor plaintiff was standing on thе sidewalk near the rounded curb line, partly facing the direction from which defendant’s truck was proceeding. He testified that while standing close to the curb he felt a hard blow on his shoulder. The next thing he remembers was that hе was lying on the street near the curb and the rear wheels of the truck were coming at him. He was not run over by thе wheels but was wedged between the tire of the rear dual wheel and the curb.
The court in granting a new trial stated that it committed error when it charged the jury, in effect, that, even if the truck did not pass so close to the curb thаt any overhang would strike a child on the sidewalk, the *506 jury, nevertheless, could find negligence on the part of thе defendant-driver, based on the position of the truck in the street, even though the minor plaintiff fell or was pushed off the sidewalk against the rear wheel or a part of the truck, behind the driver and necessarily beyond his vision.
When passing small children playing in a group on a sidewalk, the operator of an automobile has the duty to be attentive:
Buchanan et al. v. Belusko et al.,
When there is reason to apprehend that children might run intо a place of danger, the operator of an automobile has a duty to bring his car under such cоntrol that it can be stopped on the shortest possible notice of danger:
Silberstein et al., v. Showell, Fryer & Co. (No. 1),
These children were playing on the sidewalk at an intersectiоn, and defendant saw them playing there. This was not, in itself, a place of danger. 'But having-seen the children, there was reason for defendant to apprehend that the children might place themselves in a plaсe of danger. Defendant therefore had the duty to *507 have his car under such control that it could be stopped on the shortest possible notice of danger, and to exercise such care as was reаsonably necessary.
If the minor plaintiff ran or was pushed into the rear wheel of the truck, after the front оf the vehicle had safely passed the children and was in the street a foot from the curb, and the driver did not and could not see behind him and observe that the children were in danger, no negligence could be imputed tо defendant. Defendant was engaged in turning a corner. The road into which defendant was turning was approximately 24 feet wide. There was uncontradieted testimony that in order to have driven any further away from the sidewalk where the children were playing, it would have been necessary to drive against traffic over the far curb of the street into which the truck was turning, or at least to miss it by a few inches. Defendant was not required to keep his eyes continually and solely on these children, after the front of his truck had passed them and they no longer could be seen from the driver’s seat. Otherwise, the driver would become the insurer of plaintiff’s safety. In the forеgoing circumstances, we agree with the learned court below that it committed an error of law. A jury may nоt speculate how far removed in the highway a vehicle should travel while passing children playing on the sidewalk.
Order affirmed.
