This is an appeal from a judgment rendered after the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of ten thousand dollars, damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by said plaintiff as the result of an accident in which the plaintiff was struck by one of the cars of the defendant upon a public street of the city of Oakland on the twenty-fourth day of March, 1915.
Said plaintiff on said day, a child of the age of five years, was living with his parents near the place where the accident occurred, and had been sent by his parents on an errand which would take him across Adeline Street, upon which the defendant was at the time operating a double-track electric railway, which ran in a general northerly and southerly direction. The child undertook to cross said street diagonally in a southwesterly direction when a street-car of the defendant, running in a southerly direction along the westerly track of its said railway, struck the plaintiff, cutting off his right hand.
In the complaint which was filed herein on behalf of said plaintiff for the recovery of damages for his said injuries it was alleged generally that while the plaintiff was crossing said street as aforesaid the defendant so negligently and *223 carelessly ran and operated one of its electric cars in a southerly direction along said street that the car struck said plaintiff and caused the injuries complained of. To this complaint the defendant in due course filed its answer, denying negligence on its part, and setting up by way of special defense the negligence of the plaintiff.
Upon the trial of the cause upon the issues thus generally framed the verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor were rendered, from which this appeal has been taken.
As to whether the motorman in charge of said car—with Ms opportunity to observe the child from the time it started *224 to cross the street, and the direction in which it was going in attempting to cross, and its action in so doing, permitting him to judge whether or not the child was aware of the approach of the car—was or was not negligent, is a matter upon which the evidence is conflicting. There was some testimony as to the ringing of the bell; but whether or not this form of warning was given sufficiently early for the child to have heard the same, and possibly to have thus avoided the collision, there is some dispute in the evidence, which it was the province of the jury to determine. There is also a conflict in the evidence as to when the motorman first applied his brakes, and first began to take such other steps as the mechanism of the car provided for its stoppage in time to avoid running down the child; these were also matters which it was the province of the jury to resolve. Upon this branch of the case we are, therefore, of the opinion that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury as to the defendant’s negligence in the operation of its ear, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury.
m The next contention of the appellant herein is that the trial court was in error in giving to the jury any instruction upon the subject of last clear chance, and the appellant further contends in this connection that the instructions which the court did actually give upon this subject were erroneous.
As to the other instructions of the court of which the appellant complains, its objections are urged in the most general terms without the citation of any authority which would serve to indicate in what respect they are erroneous. We are unable to perceive that these instructions were in any respect erroneous, and are satisfied that the jury on the whole was fully and fairly instructed as to the law of the case.
This disposes of the defendant’s various contentions, none of which we find to have sufficient merit to justify a reversal of the case.
The judgment is affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 5, 1920.
All the Justices concurred.
