266 Pa. 449 | Pa. | 1920
Opinion by
On April 15, 1918, about 7 p. m., Stanley Gawronski, not quite eight years of age, was injured while on a freight car, which was standing, with others, in an open railroad yard of defendant company at American and Norris streets, Philadelphia.
The opinion handed down by the court below, entering judgment for defendant n. o. v., correctly describes the location thus: “The scene of the accident was defendant’s right-of-way, which is partly coincident with the lines of American street,- as plotted but unopened. The
On the day above stated, for at least three quarters of an hour before the accident, fifteen boys, Stanley among them, had been seated on the beforementioned freight cars, looking at a ball game, in full view of one of defendant’s watchmen and others of its employees. The cars in question, unattached to any motive power, were stationed at a place where defendant “put cars that stand for some time”; and, while the testimony is meager, yet young Gawronski’s brother stated he and Stanley had been “playing over three months” on and around the cars, between which the former was caught and injured; that they had been on top of them “a couple of times”; and the railroad watchman was within their view “every day” they either played around or sat on top of such cars.
The accident was caused by a “runaway engine” which collided with a train coming from the opposite direction, thus upsetting either itself or the locomotive of the latter (which, is not made certain); as a result of this collision, the freight cars on the adjoining track were struck in the rear, and the Gawronski boy was injured by being caught between two of them.
Exactly what caused the engine to run away was not shown; but, when plaintiff was proving his case, counsel for defendant made the following admission: “It is admitted that the engineer of the runaway engine...... lost control of the mechanism of the engine in such a
The jury gave the minor plaintiff a verdict of $3,750, upon which the court below refused judgment, saying, inter alia: “The accident did not result from the use of the place as a playground, but because the boy was otherwise trespassing and was in a situation where he was not to be looked for, and where the railroad could not, by any custom proved, have been charged with knowledge of his presence actual, likely, or probably; the permissive use of the place shown by the testimony was as a playground, but nowhere was it suggested that there was any custom or permission to use standing cars as part of the playground.”
We have repeatedly held that, where a railroad company permits its yards or tracks to be used as a playground for children, the corporation is required to operate its rolling stock with due care to avoid injuring such children, and that the ordinary rule, as to the limited measure of duty owing to trespassers, is inapplicable: O’Leary v. Pittsburgh, etc., R. R., 248 Pa. 4, 9; Counizzarri v. P. &. R. Ry., 248 Pa. 474, 477, 478; Francis v. B. & O. R. R., 247 Pa. 425, 429; as to the duty toward children, see also Toner v. P. R. R., 263 Pa. 438, 440; Petrowski v. P. & R. Ry. Co., 263 Pa. 531, 536; Piepke v. P. & R. Ry. Co., 242 Pa. 321, 326.
We have held likewise that one fixed with a duty to regard the safety of children is obliged reasonably to anticipate they will do the ordinary and natural things which may be looked for from them under the circumstances. What we said in Hydraulic Works Co. v. Orr, 83 Pa. 332, 336 — “The mind......sees at once that in such a place, and under these circumstances, he [defendant] had good reason to expect that one day or other some one, probably a thoughtless boy,......would be led there” — is not inappropriate here, when considering plaintiff’s position on defendant’s cars.
Defendant contends that, besides the position assumed by the court below in entering judgment n. o. v., negligence was not sufficiently proved, since plaintiff failed to show precisely what caused the locomotive to run away; but we cannot subscribe to this view. Counsel for defendant volunteered an admission wherein he stated: “The engineer lost control of the mechanism of his engine in such a way that the brakes would not work.” This, in the absence of further explanation, presumably, within the power of defendant to make, was sufficient to justify the jury in finding either that the locomotive was defective or that it was improperly han
The admission just referred to was made at the end of plaintiff’s case, evidently for the purpose of saving him from presenting further testimony, by supplying, in this manner, the necessary information relative to the actual (Cause of the runaway of the engine. We say this, because, immediately thereafter, defendant moved for a nonsuit, stating various reasons, but not that proof of negligence was lacking so far as the runaway of the engine is concerned; in fact, that point does not appear to have been specifically raised until the written motion for judgment n. o. v. was filed after the trial.
The presiding judge said to the jury: “As to the lack of control of the engine......the fact is established by admission......that this engine was so operated it ran into another car upon its track, upsetting the latter and throwing it into* two* neighboring cars, causing this boy’s injury. I leave it to you to say whether that is a proper control of the engine, or whether that is not evidence of a lack of control on the part of those who were in charge on that day. The only suggestion or reason for the conduct of the engineer and fireman in jumping from the engine and letting it go wild, uncontrolled, is that they thought their lives were in danger.” At this point, counsel for plaintiff suggested: “According to the admission, I gather that the brakes were out of order on this day”; to which Mr. Mason replied: “There is no such admission.” Even here, counsel for defendant did not specifically contend there was no proof of negligence; although, at the end of the trial, he took an exception “to that part of the charge which is concerned with the proof of negligence,” and the court then said: “Of course, gentlemen, if there is no negligence shown in this case, your verdict must be for defendant.” As before intimated, when counsel for defendant undertook to admit the circumstances which gave rise to* and attended the runaway of
For a ruling illustrative of the principle just applied, see Janock v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 252 Pa. 199, where certain cars overturned on the elevated tracks of a railroad, and their contents spilled, injuring a pedestrian on the street beneath. We held the defendant liable, saying (pp. 200-201) : “Freight carsdonot ordinarily leave their tracks......; when they do so, the natural inference is either the tracks or cars were in a defective condition, or the method of operating the train faulty.” See also Dougherty v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co., 257 Pa. 118, 124; Haggerty v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co., 244 Pa. 107.
No contributing efficient cause having intervened to interrupt the sequence of events which were set in motion by the railroad company’s failure to maintain control of its instrumentalities, the jury was warranted in finding defendant’s negligence to be the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury: Gudfelder v. Pittsburgh, etc., Ry., 207 Pa. 629, 633, et seq.; Chambers v. Carroll, 199 Pa. 371, 374.
For the reasons here given, the judgment for defendant is reversed and the record remitted to the court below with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff.