This is an action brought by the appellant, individually and as the next friend of her minor son, Billy Avery Faulkner, to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by the child. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the complaint and dismissed the suit. The only question is whether the plaintiff’s pleading states a cause of action for negligence.
The complaint avers that the defendant, in the course of its business, maintained a large tank for the storage of tar. Despite repeated protests (presumably by the plaintiff or other neighbors), the defendant allowed the tar to spill over, so that it flowed from the defendant’s premises into an area where the plaintiff’s son and other members of the public were accustomed to walk and play.
On July 7, 1961, Billy Avery, then nine years old, walked into the tar to such a depth that Ms feet were covered up to his ankles. When the child reached his home his parents, “upon seeing the tar on his feet and recognizing the necessity that all of the same promptly be removed therefrom, did attempt to remove the same in the most prudent and careful manner possible by taking said child into the middle of their back yard to remove said tar by the use of gasoline, the only effective cleaning-substance available at the time.” While the parents were so engaged a second child ran into the yard and unexpectedly exploded a cap-pistol cap, creating a spark that ignited the gasoline fumes and resulted in serious burns to Billy Avery’s legs.
The circuit court was right in sustaining- the demurrer, for the facts do not show that the child’s injuries were proximately caused by negligence on the part of the defendant. We reach this conclusion whether we devote our attention primarily to the question of negligence or to that of proximate cause. The two things, as we observed in Hill v. Wilson,
To be negligent a person must be in a position to realize that his conduct involves a hazard to others. In the Hill case we described a negligent act as “one from which an ordinary prudent person in the actor’s position —in the same or similar circumstances — would foresee such an appreciable risk of harm to others as to cause him not to do the act, or to do it in a more careful manner.” Later, in Collier v. Citizens Coach Co.,
This defendant, in allowing tar to overflow into an area used as a playground, could be charged with the duty of anticipating the likelihood that a child might get pitch upon his feet. But this possibility does not involve, in the language of the Hill case, such an appreciable risk of harm as to cause an ordinarily prudent person either not to do the act or to do it in a more careful manner. It is a commonplace everyday occurrence for children to get tar or other harmless viscous substances upon their skin. Such matter may be, and ordinarily is, washed off without any danger whatever to the child. To hold that this defendant was under a duty to guard against the remote chance of what actually occurred in this case would be in effect to strike the element of foreseeability from the concept of negligence in such a situation and thus to impose an absolute liability upon persons handling tar and similar innocuous substances.
With respect to proximate cause the term is usually defined as a cause which, “in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would not have occurred.” Collier v. Citizens Coach Co., supra; Ben M. Hogan & Co. v. Krug,
A much stronger case than this one for the imposition of liability was considered in Pittsburgh Reduction Co. v. Horton,
Affirmed.
