Appellee, a member of the Metropolitan Police, was directing traffic when he was struck by an automobile and thrown into the path of another vehicle which ran over him. The driver of the first car had stolen it the day before from a parking lot operated by appellant. Appellee as plaintiff in-the District Court recovered of appellant damages for personal injuries. On this appeal appellant does not contest that the theft was due to its negligence in leaving the lot unguarded at the time the theft occurred. Appellee adds as an item of negligence appellant’s delay of several hours in learning of the theft and reporting it ta the police. Also uncontested on appeal
On its facts, and on the law as well, the case falls between Ross v. Hartman,
Appellant relies upon Howard v. Swagart,
Our conclusion in the present case is that the issue of proximate cause was properly submitted to the jury notwithstanding the subsequent negligence of the thief. As reasonable men the jury were not required to decide that appellant’s negligence was not also a proximate cause. The following statement of the Supreme Court of Illinois in Ney v. Yellow Cab Co.,
The increase of casualties from traffic accidents is a matter of common knowledge and concern. The incidence of automobile thefts and damages and injuries resulting from such larcenous escapades has accordingly increased.
The judgment of the jury in the present case should be accepted as factually reasonable and, therefore, not legally invalid.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In Ross the defendant’s agent left defendant’s truck unattended in a public alloy, with the key in the unlocked ignition in violation of a D.C. traffic ordinance. Shortly thereafter someone drove the truck away and negligently struck and injured plaintiff. In Casey defendant’s agent negligently left its truck parked on its business lot in the District of Columbia with the key in the ignition. “[M]any hours” later and several miles south of Petersburg, Virginia, plaintiff was injured when struck by the truck as it was being negligently operated by an unknown person who fled the scene.
. In Sehaff the evidence was that defendant’s driver left a truck, with keys in the ignition, parked adjacent to a restaurant to which be was delivering goods for defendants, and that employees of the restaurant drove off in the truck and injured plaintiffs. In Boland a young man left his car with his father prior to entering the military service. The father kept the car with other family cars at their residence. The keys were kept above the sun visors. While the father was out of town, a yard man employed by the father and known by him to have been convicted of larceny took the son’s car from the garage and drove to Virginia, where he negligently struck and injured the 13-year-old plaintiff.
