108 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1900
The boy who was run over by the defendant’s street car in this case was a little less than seven years of age, and was upon the public street, in the daytime, alone, or at least not accompanied by either his parents or any custodian. It is argued that the trial court should have taken the case from the jury, and granted a nonsuit, on the ground of contributory negligence on the part of the boy or his parents. This contention cannot be sustained. In case of an accident happening to a child of such tender years, it must be an extreme case indeed which would 'warrant a court in granting a nonsuit on the ground of the child’s negligence; and it is frequently said that such a child cannot be held guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Johnson v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 49 Wis. 529; McVoy v. Oakes, 91 Wis. 214. Nor can it be said that the parents are guilty of negligence as matter of law for permitting such a child to be alone upon the street. Both of these questions were properly for the jury upon the evidence. Johnson v. C. & N. W. R. Co., supra.
But the question whether the evidence showed any negligence on the part of the motorman which was the proximate cause of the injury is a more difficult one. The negligence claimed is that the car was running at excessive speed, that no signals were given, and thus that the boy was run down when the evidence tended to show that he had been on the track a sufficient time within which signals could have been given or the car stopped before reaching him. There is no. dispute but that the accident happened in the middle of a block, at a place where people were not expected to cross the street; and it is admitted that the street car, at the time of the accident, had only proceeded about 150 feet from a full stop. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses testifies that in his judgment the car was going at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour when it was still about sixty feet from the boy, or at a point about ninety feet from the starting point.
Oareful examination of all of the evidence of the eyewitnesses of the accident, including that of the boy himself, convinces us that it was practically undisputed in the case that the boy unexpectedly stepped or ran in front of the car when only a few feet distant, and when it could not have been stopped, nor effective warning given, before it ran over him, whatever its speed. It is true that the boy himself testified that he ran into the middle of the track, and got the peanut, and was standing still, eating it, and had been so standing for a few minutes when he was struck by the car; but this evidence is not only impossible under the admitted facts, but is at variance with the testimony of all
As will be seen, there is nothing in all this evidence except the palpably impossible statement of the boy himself,, which he afterwards contradicted, which brings the boy upon the track more than ten feet in front of the car. The conclusion that he stepped' or ran in front of the car when only a few feet distant is irresistible; in fact, the evidence will sustain no other. The testimony is unanimous that the car could not be stopped within this distance, whether it was going twenty-five miles an hour or six miles an hour. The most of the witnesses who testify on the subject say that a car going eight miles an hour could not be stopped short of about sixty feet. It is true one witness says that an emergency stop could be made inside of fifteen feet, but he afterwards says that this fifteen feet would be after the power is actually applied on reversal, and that it would take about thirty seconds before the power got hold of the car.
So the case presented is one of the sudden and unexpected action of the boy in running in front of the car. We see no reason to say that the motorman could reasonably anticipate such action on the part of the boy, and hence his failure to anticipate it cannot be called negligence. Eastwood v. La Crosse City R. Co. 94 Wis. 163.
By the Court.— Judgment reversed, and action remanded for a new trial.