49 N.Y.S. 868 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Lead Opinion
The sole question for our consideration is as to-whether or not the trial judge erred in dismissing the complaint upon the ground that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. In disposing of the motion to dismiss, the learned judge summarized! the facts by saying:
*869 “The boy, while running diagonally across the street, with nothing to obstruct his view, was struck by the left side of the front of the car, and thrown under the left side of the car. This shows conclusively that he had not sufficient time to head off the car, and that in making the attempt he was guilty of contributory, negligence.”
This summary, which, is exact, seems to us to sustain the ruling made; but the earnest argument made against such a. conclusion, and the sympathy which is excited from so serious an accident to a boy of tender years, and the different inferences which it is insisted can be drawn from the facts, have required an examination of the question, with a view to determining whether, upon any inference to be fairly deduced, the little boy can be absolved from the charge of •contributory negligence, as matter of law.
The rule is that only in cases where the evidence shows that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed to the injury, as a proximate cause of it, is the court justified in withholding that question from the jury. In determining whether such negligence here existed, we must apply another rule, viz. that a child is called upon to exercise only that degree of care required from one of its age, and it is only the absence of such care that will be regarded as contributory negligence. What would be negligence, therefore, in an adult, is not, as matter of law, negligence in a child. But in determining in a given case whether such negligence is present or absent, where injuries to a child are involved, its age must be considered, as well as whether its own act was the proximate, or only the remote, cause of the injury. Although here the child was but eight years of age, it is conceded that he was a bright boy, capable of caring for himself while on the street, and in crossing it. His tender age would forbid our expecting any great degree of care and prudence, yet, being sui juris, it must be held that he was bound to exercise some care, commensurate with his age and intelligence. Applying these rules to the facts appearing, we could only absolve the boy from the charge of contributory negligence by assuming that his running upon the track was in no sense one of the proximate causes leading to the injury, or that he was not bound to observe any care in crossing an avenue which was constantly traversed by cable cars, or that he was in no way negligent, on such an avenue, in starting in the middle of the block on a run, with nothing to prevent his observing the car moving north at a slow rate of speed, with a wagon in front of it, and, seeing the car, never abating his speed in his journey across the avenue, thus taking all chances or risks of crossing in safety. It will be observed that the witnesses all agree that the boy was running, and did not stop while crossing the avenue, and we have no evidence to show whether he looked for or at the approaching car, or in what direction he was looking; nor is there any proof that he did anything in the way of care or precaution, except to run into collision with the car. He did not stop, or look or listen for its approach, and we are left in doubt as to whether he really saw the car; for, if he had observed- it, he surely would have known of its close proximity to him, and the danger which he would thereby run in crossing the track. The only inference to be drawn is that he ran heedlessly, without reference to the position
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
VAN BRUNT, P. J., and McLAUGHLIN, J., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot concur in the affirmance of this judgment. The complaint was dismissed solely upon the ground that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. There was evidence to sustain a finding that when the plaintiff started to cross the track this car was proceeding at a slow rate of speed,—not faster than a man could walk; that the plaintiff started to cross the track diagonally upon a run, but that, after he started, the car, having been blocked by a wagon in front of it, suddenly accelerated its speed, and thus caught the plaintiff before he was able to get across the track, and injured him. It seems to me that upon the question as to whether or not it was contributory negligence, as a matter of law, to make the attempt to cross the track, the situation as it existed when the attempt was made is a controlling consideration. If, at the speed that the car was then moving, it was safe to cross in front of it, it seems to me certainly a question for the jury to determine whether a person about to cross such a track in a crowded city street is bound to anticipate that the speed of the car will be suddenly accelerated, without notice or warning, so that an act which is without danger under existing conditions becomes dangerous because of a change in the condition caused by the defendant. The act of crossing the street between the cross walks is not of itself contributory negligence. It is merely a fact to be taken into account in determining whether or not the defendant was negligent. There certainly was evidence from which the jury could find that it was not negligence for the plaintiff to attempt to cross this track where he did, if the car had not increased its speed; and it seems to me equally clear that the plaintiff was not bound to assume that the speed would thus be suddenly increased without some sort of warning. There was evidence tending to show that the defendant’s car, upon its way up Third avenue, had been stopped by a truck upon the track, so that its headway had been checked, and it was proceeding at a slow pace,—about as fast as a man could walk; and it is quite apparent that, as the car could not proceed on its way rapidly until this truck left the track, the plaintiff started to run across the track obliquely in front of the wagon and the car. As he got upon the track, the truck was leaving the track, and the motive power was suddenly applied to the car, so that it shot rapidly forward from behind the truck, and struck him. A passenger in the car saw the boy as he was upon the south-bound track, some time before the power was applied to the car. The boy was then running across the track. . If the motorman had been attending to his business,—looking out for persons upon the track,—it is quite clear that he could have seen the boy, and could have delayed applying the power to the car until the boy was across the track. Instead of that, he seems to have been paying exclusive attention to the truck driver, and engaged in conversation with him, not only while he was
*874 “It was necessary for one attempting to cross the track to cross somewhat closely in front of any street car, and it was not contributory negligence, as a matter of law, to do so, unless the speed of the car was so great, and its proximity so close, that the pedestrian would not probably be able to escape it. As is well known, even careful persons must, in pursuance of their ordinary avocations, cross the streets of this city in front of vehicles and moving cars; and to say that to do that constituted contributory negligence, as a matter of law, would put an embargo upon the streets, so far as pedestrians are concerned.”
And neither in the prevailing opinion nor in the dissenting opinion is that proposition of law disputed. The only ground of the dissent was that the question of the speed of the car in that case was immaterial, as there was nothing to show that the speed of the car was increased between the time that the plaintiff stepped upon the track and the time that she was struck, and nothing to show that after she stepped upon the track any action of the gripman, however prompt, could have averted the accident. It seems to me that we have here the proof from which the jury could find that the acceleration of the speed of this car was the sole cause of the accident; that, hut for such acceleration of the speed, the plaintiff could have crossed the track in safety; and that it was not negligence for a person to attempt to cross such a street where the car was so nearly at a standstill that a person walking quickly could avoid it. Unless we are prepared to overthrow the principles established in the Fandel Case, and which seem to have been acquiesced in by all the members of the court, I do not see how we can sustain this judgment. On the authority of that case, I think this judgment should he reversed.
PATTERSON, J., concurs.