delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiff, Robert E. Dickeson, brought suit in the circuit court of Cook County against defendants, Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal RR. Co. (Baltimore and Ohio), the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company (Pittsburgh), and the Pennsylvania Rаilroad Company (Pennsylvania), to recover damages for personal injuries suffered in an accident involving one of Baltimore and Ohio’s trains. The jury returned a verdict against all three defendants in the amount of $116,480, judgment was entered thereon and defendants appealed to the Appellate Court, First Judicial District. That court affirmed the judgment (
Most of the facts are not in dispute and are covered in detail by the appellate court opinion. Only those facts relevant to disposition of the issues presented here need be discussed.
The situs of the accident was a railroad embankment, or elevаted right of way, located in a densely populated area of Chicago, Illinois. On January 21, 1953, plaintiff, age '14, and his younger brother climbed up the embankment, using a well-worn path, and stood by the easternmost of thе five tracks while a slowly moving Baltimore and Ohio train approached from the north. The boys waved to the engineer and he waved back. As the train passed, plaintiff grabbed onto the side of a freight car by means of a ladder affixed thereto and began to climb up the rungs to the top. As he was climbing, gazing upward, the train entered the Jackson Boulevard overpass and plaintiff was brushed off the side of the cаr by a bridge girder, sustaining serious injuries.
The Pittsburgh railroad company was the owner of the right of way on which plaintiff was injured; the Pennsylvania was the lessee of that right of way, and the Baltimore and Ohio used the right of way by agreement with the Pittsburgh.
In his complaint, plaintiff advanced essentially two theories to sustain a finding of liability. He sought recovery from all defendants on the basis of the Baltimore and Ohio’s common-law negligence, charging intеr alia that it operated its train without due regard to his safety in that it knew or should have known that children such as himself constantly played in the area and were in the habit of boarding trains. Under the applicable Illinois law, the Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania railroads, as owner and lessee of the right-of-way, would be vicariously liable for the negligence of the Baltimore and Ohio. Armstrong v. Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Co.,
Plaintiff also proceeded against the Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania railroads on an independent basis, asserting that under the principles enunciated in Kahn v. Jamеs Burton Co.,
The chief defense at trial involved plaintiff’s alleged contributory negligence; hоwever, the Baltimore and Ohio also moved for a directed verdict on the theory that it owed, plaintiff only a duty to refrain from wilful and wanton conduct, and that such conduct was not charged nor established by thе evidence presented. The court denied this motion and also refused defendants’ tendered instruction reciting the wilful and wanton standard. Defendants contend these rulings were erroneous, citing the following languаge in Briney v. Illinois Central Railroad Co.,
On this issue, the uncontradicted evidence showed that children customarily played on the tracks, often “flipping” rides on slow moving freight trains, and that defendants had, or were chargeable with, knowledge of these practices. For example, records subpоenaed from the Pennsylvania’s files disclosed that four other children within three years preceding this accident had been injured by moving trains on this same stretch of track. In light of this evidence, the question of whether рlaintiff was in a place of danger was a factual matter for the jury’s determination. We hold the trial court’s refusal to direct a verdict and to give the tendered instruction was proper.
We are satisfiеd that there was sufficient evidence in the record from which the jury could find that the Baltimore and Ohio negligently operated its train (see American National Bank and Trust Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
The Maskaliunas case permits a directed verdiсt to be entered against a child above the age of '14 on the issue of his contributory negligence; but it does not permit the contributory negligence of such a child to be measured by the identical standard аs applied to an adult. As clearly stated in the above quoted matter, a minor over 14 years of age is entitled to have “his intelligence and experience” considered in determining this issue. As it is self-evidence that a 14-year-old boy’s intelligence and experience could differ substantially from an adult’s, the cited authorities holding adults guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law for “flipping” trains are not сontrolling here. Rather, a factual review must be made to determine whether this issue was properly submitted to the jury.
It was undisputed that plaintiff, who had recently moved to Chicago from Drakesboro, Kentucky, had nеver ridden a railroad train in his life nor had he ever attempted to “flip” a ride prior to the date of the accident. Though his physical health was excellent, except for a cross-eyed condition, he had failed one year of school in Kentucky, and in Chicago was placed behind his age group in school. A psychologist, George Speer, who examined plaintiff shortly before trial, testified thаt he had an I.Q. of 81, which classified him as “dull-normal”, “less than average intelligence”. His conclusions were based on the results of three tests, described as objective and recognized in the profession. In his oрinion, plaintiff had done the best he could on the tests. Cross-examination developed the possibility of intentionally doing poorly on the tests and the lack of scientific accurateness to the results. Under these facts and circumstances, the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence was one for the jury’s determination. As it was properly instructed on this issue, its finding that plaintiff was free from contributory negligence must stand.
Defendants urge that the admission of the psychologist’s testimony was reversible error. It is charged that this testimony was based on the results of subjective tests and should therefore have been excluded under the rule set forth in Jensen v. Elgin Joliet and Eastern Railway Co.,
Defendants’ other assignments of error relating to the admission of certain exhibits and the restriction of cross-examination were considered and properly disposed of by the appellate court. The sole contention remaining involves the applicability of the attractive nuisance principles set forth in Kahn v. James Burton,
The judgment of the Appellate Court, First District, is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
