' This is an appeal from a judgment awarding damages to plaintiffs below because of defendant’s negligence. The episode out of which this suit arose occurred in appellant-defendant’s department store on November 15, 1945. At that time, Betty-Lynne Jacobsen (plaintiff-appellee), a four-year-old child, and her seven-year-old sister ■were accompanying their mother, who had seen shopping at appellant’s store. While Ihe three were descending from the third to the second floor on an escalator, Betty-Lynne broke away from her mother, who had allegedly been holding the child’s hand, and ran down the moving steps. Before her mother was able to overtake her, Betty-Lynne had fallen at the point just above the aperture where the escalator steps break and enter the floor. As she tried to arise, her right hand was caught in the aperture. The small finger of that hand was so badly injured that it had to be amputated that same day. The child also developed an unsightly scar which required plastic surgery.
According to the testimony, the escalator on which the accident occurred was a 1934 model and was functioning smoothly. (Most of the escalators used in the store were of 1941 construction, which model had a smaller aperture at the point where the steps disappeared into the floor than did the 1934 model.) The escalator’s “stop” button was not conspicuously marked and there was no attendant at hand. Nor was there a warning sign calling attention to possible dangers. There was evidence, however, that the appliance had passed a District of Columbia inspection each year.
Suit was brought by the child’s father in his own behalf for medical expenses and loss of services and, on the child’s behalf, for injuries suffered by her. Both were awarded damages by the jury.
Appellant challenges the verdict below on four grounds: the standard of conduct prescribed by the lower court was incorrect; even if appellant were negligent, such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury; the admission of certain evidence was prejudicial error; and the amount of damages awarded was excessive.
The standard of conduct required of owners and operators of elevators in the District of Columbia has been held to- be the “highest degree of care” in the construction, maintenance and operation of those appliances.
1
Like elevators, escalators are an “essential part of the building, and persons using them do so by the invitation of the defendant.” Munsey v. Webb, 1913,
The charge given to the jury below proceeded on the theory that there are three degrees of care and, upon the authori *15 ty of the elevator cases, that appellant was obligated to exercise the “highest degree of care.” In its very able explanation of the charge, however, the court recognized that, because of the greater danger involved in this case, “reasonable care under all the circumstances” required what was in effect the “highest degree of care.” It was pointed out that the appellant’s position “as an operator of an escalator” made it necessary that he “ * * * use the highest degree of care for the safe carriage of such infant plaintiff as a passenger. This higher degree of care does not make the defendant an insurer of the infant plaintiff’s safety, but it does require the defendant to exercise all due care, skill and foresight within reason for the safe carriage of its passengers. The failure to exercise that degree of care constitutes negligence * * (Emphasis supplied throughout.)
In addition, the court stated that the degree of care imposed by law “ * * * may vary according to what the relationship of the parties is, it may vary according to the person, the circumstances of the case * * It thus made clear that what is “reasonable” in certain circumstances may be unreasonable in others; that the particular factual context may vary the care which must be exercised. 3 For example, the large number of people who are regularly invited to use a department store escalator make any defect or carelessness in its construction or operation potentially very dangerous. And since persons accompanied by small children are often among the invitees, the precautions taken and care exercised by the escalator owner must reflect an awareness of that fact and hence must be proportionately greater. 4 The lower court properly instructed the jury to this effect when it said that
“It is ordinarily necessary to exercise greater care for the protection and safety of a young child than for an adult person who possesses normal physical and mental faculties.
“One dealing with children must anticipate the ordinary behavior of children. The fact that they usually cannot and do not exercise the same degree of prudence for their own safety as adults, that they are often childish and impulsive imposes a duty to exercise a proportional vigilance and caution on those dealing with children, and from whose conduct injury to a child may result.”
If such content had not been given to the “highest degree of care,” and instead, the meaning thereof left entirely to the jury, we might well have been compelled to find error in the charge. Raymond v. Portland R. Co., 1905,
We do think, however, that it would have been more in accord with the modern authorities to discuss the standard of conduct required of appellant in terms of “reasonable care under all the circumstances.”
5
That formula contains within it the potential for flexibility in application which is necessary to deal with the infinite number of fact situations which may arise. It readily permits change with changing circumstances. Under such a view, the greater than ordinary danger posed by the existence of an escalator with an aperture between treads and floor large enough to catch hold of a child’s hand, in a place frequented by children, would be among the circumstances to be called to the attention of the fact-finder, whether court or
*16
jury. If the escalator in use were found to be potentially dangerous, a factor to be weighed in determining whether the proper quantum of care had been exercised would be the adequacy of the compensatory precautions taken by the appellant, i. e., stationing of attendants, warning signs, etc. We believe that the instructions given to the jury below were entirely consistent with this view. But the possibility pf confusion which may attend such a charge when not as well explained suggests the desirability of avoiding reference to “degrees of care.”
6
As said by the Colorado court in the leading case of Denver Consolidated Electric Co. v. Simpson, 1895,
The charge of the court below with regard to standard of conduct correctly grasped the essentials of the concepts outlined above and, therefore, was not reversible error. The mere fact that reference was made to “degrees of care” does not alter the situation, 8 for it is settled that a charge is to be viewed as a whole rather than divided into isolated segments. 9 As we have already indicated, the statement that defendant was required to exercise “all due care, skill and foresight within reason,” and that the circumstances varied the amount of care required, satisfactorily resolved the ambiguity which might otherwise have been present.
As to the question of proximate cause, appellant argues that it was the mother’s failure to properly care for her child which caused the injury. We think that the owner of a department store must be held to be presumptively aware of the tendency of children to stray even from vigilant parents, especially when subjected to the varied fascinations found in such a store. It is with this tendency in mind that precautions should be taken. Thus, the failure to take reasonable steps to guard against injuries due to the aperture between the escalator treads and the floor, *17 might properly have been found by the jury to be the proximate cause of the injury. 10
Two objections to rulings on evidence remain for consideration. First, the lower court admitted evidence of a prior accident which occurred some years before under similar circumstances, i. e., to a three-year old child on the same 1934 model escalator but on a different floor. “Evidence of prior accidents has always been admissible to show defendant’s notice or knowledge of the defective or dangerous condition alleged to have caused the accident.” Sullivan v. Detroit & Windsor Ferry Co., 1931,
Since such evidence goes only to the question of what could reasonably have been done, there is no need to prove that a given precaution has attained the status of a custom. As Justice Holmes said in Veginan v. Morse, 1893,
We do not think that the trial court abused its discretion when it sustained the jury’s award of $15,000 to the infant plaintiff and $2,000 to her father. 13 The judgment below is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Goldenberg Co. v. Schicht, 1936,
. Of. May Dept. Stores Co. v. Bell, 8 Cir., 1932,
. Compliance with standards and precautions established by custom would not necessarily discharge this obligation of care proportioned to the circumstances because “what ought to be dono is fixed by a standard of reasonable prudence, whether it usually is complied with or
not"
Holmes, J., in Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Behymer, 1903,
. Reynolds v. May Dept. Stores Co., 8 Cir., 1942,
. See discussion and authorities collected in Prosser, Torts 256 et seq. (1941); *16 Harper, Torts 170-171 (1933); 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, § 43 (1941).
. In addition to note 5 supra, see New York Central R. R. Co. v. Lockwood, 1873,
. Cf. S. S. Kresge Co. v. McCallion, 8 Cir., 1932,
. As an Iowa court said in Denny v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 1911,
. Danzansky v. Zimbolist, 1939, 70 App.D. C. 234, 237,
. Burdine’s, Inc., v. McConnell, 1941,
. “The plaintiff in all negligence cases may show that better, safer, and more practicable devices than those used were available to the defendant.” Delmore v. Polinsky, 1945,
. Cf. Brigham Young University v. Lillywhite, 10 Cir., 1941,
. Cf. Southern Ry. Co. Carolina Division v. Bennett, 1914,
