183 Mo. App. 613 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of the alleged joint and concurring negligence of the three defendants. Plaintiff recovered and defendants prosecute the appeal.
Plaintiff received her injuries through being shot in the right side, by means of a shotgun in the hands of defendant Kenneth Jackson, a minor, thirteen years of age. Kenneth Jackson is a defendant here, and the other two defendants are Robert J. Jackson, his father, and Laura Jackson, his mother.
It appears plaintiff resided adjoining and as immediate neighbor to the Jackson home. Friendly relations existed between the two families, and plaintiff was in the home of the Jacksons as a caller—that is, not an expressly invited guest, but to pay a social visit —at the time she was shot. Plaintiff, together with Mrs. Jackson and another l'ady, was in the dining room of the Jackson home when Kenneth Jackson entered with a shotgun and deliberately leveled and fired it at plaintiff. There is no suggestion in the case that plaintiff was intentionally or wantonly shot by defendant Kenneth Jackson, but the case proceeds on the grounds of negligence alone.
The petition avers, and the evidence tends to prove, that Kenneth Jackson was a reckless, indiscreet boy of thirteen years of age, wholly unfit to possess and control such a dangerous instrumentality as a shotgun. Notwithstanding this, Kenneth was permitted to own and control the gun, in .that a neighbor had given it to him not long before, and his two co-defendants—that is, his parents—permitted him and even his younger brother, to handle and use it. The negligence averred in the petition and relied upon throughout the case is the separate but concurring acts of the three defendants. The petition proceeds on the
The evidence tends to prove all of the averments of the petition and the jury so found the fact to be by awarding a verdict ag'ainst the three defendants.
There can be no doubt that one who has suffered an injury as a result of the separate negligent acts of several defendants which concur and co-operate together to produce it, may maintain his action against one or all of the defendants as he chooses. The proposition is not even a debatable one. [See Miller v. United Rys. Co., 155 Mo. App. 528, 134 S. W. 1045.]
It is a rule of the common law that a parent is not liable in damages for the torts of his children committed without his knowledge, consent, participation or sanction and not in the course of his employment of the child. [See Schouler Dom. Rel., sec. 263; Paul v. Hummel, 43 Mo. 119.] But though such be true, a parent may be required to respond, as for a breach of duty touching his control of the minor child toward the safety of others, in respect of the use of deadly
But it is said, though such be the rule of liability against the father on the grounds of negligence, the mother should be exculpated from fault, because, first, she may not control the child, in that the law vests
But it is argued neither defendant Robert J. nor Laura Jackson owed plaintiff any duty to exercise ordinary care for her safety while in their home, for she came there as an uninvited guest, or a mere caller to
The instructions given presented the issues to the jury properly and what has been said sufficiently disposes of the several arguments advanced for a reversal.
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.