131 P. 901 | Utah | 1913
This is an action brought by respondent, as parent, to recover damages for the death of an infant child, whose death, it is alleged, was caused through the negligence of the appellant, a municipal corporation. After stating the necessary matters of inducement, the acts of negligence relied on are alleged in the complaint as follows: “That the said city further owned, controlled, and maintained at the intersection of Eighth North and Third West Streets a certain culvert conveying a' stream of hot sulphur water, which stream was likewise owned, controlled, and negligently maintained by the above-named city along the north side of Eighth North between Second West and the west side of Third West Street; that the said stream of water was from
It is then further alleged that on the 26th day of October, 1910, the infant child of respondent, of the age of upwards of jseventeen months, fell into the “stream” of water, aforesaid, and was drowned, and that by reason- of her death respondent was damaged, etc.
The appellant filed an answer to the complaint, in which it denied substantially all the material allegations, and as an affirmative defense pleaded contributory negligence on the part of both the respondent and the mother of the child,¡ who was its custodian.
A trial upon these issues to a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of respondent for the sum of $1000. The court entered judgment upon the verdict-, and appellant presents the record to this court on appeal and asks us to reverse the judgment.
The evidence upon which the verdict of the jury and judgment are based is, in substance as follows:
The respondent with his family, consisting of a wife and five children, ranging in age from nine years, the oldest, down to seventeen months and a few days, the youngest, the latter being the child in question, for several years lived on West Eighth North Street, near Third West Street, in Salt Lake City. His house was on the north side of the street, facing south. In front of the house, in the street, from six to eight feet from the sidewalk, at the point where the gutters are customarily and usually placed in the streets of Salt' Lake City, there was a ditch about one foot deep and about -eighteen inches wide, in which there was constantly flowing a stream of warm water which came from what is known as the warm springs, which are situated on the , east side of North Second West Street, and, as near as we can get at
On October 26, 1910, about three minutes before twelve o’clock, noon, the wife of respondent and mother of the deceased child, named Euth, was at or near the front door inside of her house, combing the hair of one of Euth’s little sisters. At that time Euth was immediately in front of the house on the sidewalk leading from the front door to the sidewalk in the street running east and west in front of the lot, playing with a little boy and girl, both older than she. A few minutes after twelve o’clock the mother missed Euth and at once started to look for her. She saw the little
'/ The mother testified that the child “had never been near the ditch before;” that it feared the ditch. Indeed, the mother testified that all of her children feared the ditch, and none ever fell into it. Respondent testified that several families lived along the street where the ditch in question is located; that the children would play in the street and on the sidewalk, which is about eight feet distant from the ditch, but when he was asked if any of those children ever played “in close proximity to the stream” he left the question unanswered. There is no evidence that any child or children ever fell into the ditch, or in the water running therein, or that any of them were actually attracted by the water flowing in the ditch at any time. A lady, who lived about 300 or 400 feet in a northwesterly direction from respondent’s house on Third West Street, stated the time of the day when the mother found the child in the ditch, as aforesaid, to have been a little later than the mother stated it to have been. This lady' also testified that little Ruth was quick and active on her feet; that she at times would go to the lady’s house alone. Both the respondent and his wife also said that the little girl was very active on her feet.
Upon substantially the foregoing evidence the respondent rested, and appellant’s counsel interposed a motion for a
After introducing the foregoing evidence, in connection with other evidence, which it is immaterial to refer to, appellant also rested, and requested the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of appellant upon, the grounds specifically set forth in the motion, the gist of which is that respondent had failed to make a case for the jury.
The district court, in passing upon the motion to direct a verdict, in part, said: “I ruled upon the nonsuit as I did for the reason that the Supreme Court (this court) has decided in the Brown Case (Brown v. Salt Lake City, 33 Utah, 222 [93 Pac. 570, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 619, 126 Am. St. Rep. 828, 14 Ann. Cas. 1004] ) that certain things maintained by the city were attractive to children of immature years, and were dangerous in themselves, therefore coming within what is commonly called the turntable cases and cases that have followed those cases. Then they (this court) proceeded to say that turntable cases ought not to be confined to dangerous machinery alone, but to anything that is attractive. It seems to me, from reading the facts and language of the Supreme Court in that case, that a stronger
Tbe principal reason urged by appellant’s counsel why tbe judgment should be reversed is that tbe district court erred in refusing to direct tbe jury to return a verdict in favor of appellant, for tbe reason that there is no evidence in support of tbe material allegations of tbe complaint. By referring to tbe reasons given by tbe district court why it refused to direct a verdict, it becomes clear that tbe court’s refusal was based upon what it contended tbis court, in tbe opinion deciding Brown v. Salt Lake City, supra, bad said. We confess that we are unable to find anything that is said or intimated in tbe Brown Case which justifies tbe conclusion reached by tbe district court. Nor is there anything that we omitted to say in tbe Brown Case that- in any way sustains tbe district court’s conclusion. Of course, if we bad said what tbe district court says we did, namely, that
In referring to that portion of the opinion in the Brown Case where we refused to interfere with the finding of the jury that the tunnel there in question was attractive and dangerous to the hoys, the district court says: “I know what they meant by that.” Whatever faults may attributed to the decision in the Brown Case, it certainly unintelligible, and especially. to the point now under consideration. The is free from the fault of beini with respect district court intimates that, inasmuch as the evidence in the J3rown Case was practically undisputed, we therefore should have determined the liability of the city as a matter of law. With respect to that matter we gave specific reasons why we refused to interfere with the findings of the jury. Those reasons may not be convincing to all, but the language in which they are couched certainly is not obscure, and for that reason, if no other, we shall not repeat it -here. It must suffice to say that, inasmuch as the boys, for about three years, had been permitted to make a playground and a resort of the tunnel, over the protests of the residents in the vicinity in which it was located to the city council, and as the tunnel was not necessarily dangerous at the entrance, or unless the boys went down to where the stream of water flowed into it, we simply held that under all the circumstances it was a question for the jury to say whether the city, through its council, should be charged with notice that the boys, in following their natural boyish propensities, might expose themselves to the dangers which were lurking in the dark passageway at the point where the water, which caused the death of young Brown, entered the tunnel. We are still of the opinion that upon that question, in view of all the facts and circumstances, reasonable men could have arrived at different conclusions; and hence the question was one of fact, and not of law. TTpon the question as to whether the tunnel was attractive to the boys, the evidence left no room for differing opinions; but upon the question whether it was also dangerous, and thus constituted an attractive nui-'
When the Supreme Court of the United States, in Railroad Co. v. Stout, 17 Wall. 657, 21 L. Ed. 745, decided that under the facts of that case the turntable was attractive and dangerous to children of immature judgment, and hence constituted an attractive nuisance, that court simply applied an old and well-established principle to new conditions. That /court, of course, did not intend to, nor could it, lay down ' an inflexible rule whereby it could be determined in advance, as a matter of law, whether a particular case comes within the doctrine.
“Another essential condition to liability is that the attractive thing, or something inseparably connected 'with it, must he the proximate cause of the injury.”
Indeed, the district court recognized this rule and so charged the jury in this case; but, as we have seen, there is no evidence to support an affirmative finding upon that ■subject, and a charge upon a subject which requires an affirmative finding, without any supporting evidence, -is necessarily erroneous. There is nothing in the evidence au-
“It is a matter of common knowledge that alluring and attractive flumes, such as the one in question in this case, carrying running water are extensively used in this territory not only by miners in the necessary and proper conduct of their business but by farmers in the necessary diversion and application of the public streams to a beneficial use upon their lands in the cultivation of ■their crops. Not only flumes, but irrigation ditches, large and small, similar in purpose, construction, and use, and equally dangerous and alluring to the child, are to be found throughout the territory wherever cultivation of the land is carried on, and such conduits, practically impossible to render harmless, are indispensable for the maintenance of life and prosperity. There is no distinction that can properly be drawn for liability for injuries received by a child from any of such various means of diversion or use of water. Both as a matter of law and as a matter of public policy, we feel that the so-called ‘turntable doctrine’ should not be extended to cover such a case as is here presented.” Balladay v. Old Dominion, etc. Co., 12 Ariz., 129, 100 Pac. 442.
That case was one where a child fell into a flume which was carried across a lot where the children had habitually gathered and played before the flume was constructed, and continued to do so thereafter, and as it was claimed, were attracted by the flume. It appears from the record in the case at bar, as coming from a witness who was well qualified to testify upon the subject, that in Salt Lake City there were 500 miles of open ditches carrying water along the sides of the streets in -a similar manner to that carried by the stream
We remark that in carefully reading the district court’s reasons for its rulings, as they appear in the record, we are forced to the conclusion that the court entirely misapprehended the controlling principle of the Brown Case, well as of the eases upon which that case is based. It seems almost incredible that the district court found something in the Brown Case which he affected to believe differentiated it from all other cases upon the subject of attractive nuisances, and that in that case it was held that all 'that was necessary in order to bring a case within the principle governing attractive nuisances is to show that the thing com-j plained of was attractive and inherently dangerous to children of immature judgment. It seems to us that if the court had read that case, and the California case which we
Tbe judgment is reversed, and tbe case is remanded to tbe district court, witb directions to grant a new trial, and to proceed witb tbe case in accordance witb tbis opinion. Appellant to recover costs.