The motion for judgment as of nonsuit could not have been allowed on the basis of contributory negligence оn the part of plaintiffs’ intestate, since a nine-year old boy is rebuttably presumed incapable of сontributory negligence.
Hamilton v. McCash,
Plaintiffs in their complaint allege that the defendant Wright was negligent in that (1) he operated the motor vehicle in a careless and reckless manner, (2) he failed to keep and maintain his vehicle under control, (3) he operated the same with unsafe equipment, to-wit, faulty brakes, (4) he operated the vehicle at a rate of speed in excess of that warranted by conditions and surrounding circumstances, (5) he gave no warning to said minor that he was аbout to move his vehicle, either by sounding his horn or other audible signal, and (6) he maintained barrels on the rear of the truck, which made it impossible for him to see to his rear.
It is not negligence
per se
to back a car upon a highway.
Newbern v. Leary,
The evidence offered in the instаnt case shows that defendant Wright looked back before he put the truck in motion and continued to loоk backward in his direction of travel until the child was injured.
The plaintiffs offered evidence which would tend to show thаt there were barrels on the rear of the truck which prevented the defendant Wright from seeing through the rear window of the truck. We would not hold that the mere fact that Wright could not see through the back window of the truck would, in itself, convict him of negligence in backing the truck, when he took reasonable precautions before so doing by looking to the right, left and backward. To so hold would be to ignore the accepted principles of negligеnce, particularly proximate cause. Further, it is common knowledge that many modern trucks and tractоr-trailer combinations do not have rear windows, and such a holding would make every operator of such vehicles negligent as a matter of law when he backed the vehicle.
Plaintiffs offered no other evidence to sustain the allegations of their complaint, except as to the allegation that defеndant Wright gave no warning to the said minor that he was about to move his vehicle, either by sounding his horn or other audible signal. There is conflict in plaintiffs’ evidence as to whether a verbal warning of his intention to move the vehiсle was given by defendant, and on motion for involuntary nonsuit the conflict in evidence would be considered in thе light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Brewer v.
Green,
“In an aсtion for recovery of damages for wrongful death, resulting from alleged actionable negligence, the plaintiff must show: First, that there has been a failure on the part of defendant to exercise proper care in the performance of some legal duty which the defendant owed plaintiff’s intestate under the circumstances in which they were placed; and second, that such negligent breach of duty was the prоximate cause of the injury which produced the death — a cause that produced the result in continuous sequence, and without which it would not have occurred, and one from which any man of ordinary prudencе could have foreseen that such result was probable under all the facts as they existed.
Whitt v. Rand,
We are аdvertent to the principle that a motorist must recognize that children have less judgment and capaсity to appreciate and avoid danger than adults, and that children are entitled to a care in рroportion to their capacity to foresee, to appreciate and to avoid peril.
Pope v. Patterson,
Affirmed.
