E. Daniel IDZI, a Minor, by His Father and Next Friend, Edward D. Idzi, Individually, Petitioners,
v.
C.A. HOBBS, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
D.L. Middlebrooks, Harrell, Caro, Middlebrooks & Wiltshire, Pensacola, for petitioners.
Robert P. Gaines & Beggs, Lane, Daniel, Gaines & Davis, Pensacola, for respondent.
*21 PER CURIAM.
We were asked to take jurisdiction by petition for certiorari, on the basis of possible conflict, to review a decision of the district court of appeal, first district, reported as Idzi v. Hobbs, Fla.App.,
The factual situation was that the minor plaintiff, who was five years and one month old at the time, received injuries from a fire that had been set by the defendant. The defendant, a home builder, had cleared trees and underbrush from a lot that he owned and had stacked the material in a large pile, one witness testifying that "tremendous" piles of brush were made, higher than six feet, which included complete trees. The owner testified the pile was approximately four feet high, that he set the fire shortly after he arrived in the morning, and at the time he left in the early afternoon, there were very little flames but there were coals, which were covered with very large logs that did not burn, stating "We left many trees just criss-crossed across the fire to identify it so it would be perfectly in the clear." He further testified that he had seen children in the area of the lot before, and that he knew there were quite a number of young children living in the area; he had had trouble with children on his construction sites before and they did everything to try to prevent children from getting on the job and getting hurt, but that they did go on the sites because they were "just turned loose"; he could expect children to go on this site when he left, that it would not have been unusual for him to know that there would be small children playing on the lot after he left, and that was the reason "we identify the fire where anybody would ever accidentally walk into it." Another witness, who passed by the lot between three and four in the afternoon, testified he saw a fire and several children playing around, none of whom he recognized and, after warning them, the effect of which he did not recall, he drove on; that he saw a lot of smoke and several large logs, six to eight inches in diameter, lying across the pile that had been partially consumed, not flaming, but with red coals underneath.
Around four-thirty the minor plaintiff was brought home with severely burned hands; he told his father that he was trying to poke at the fire, stepped on a log, slipped, and fell in. Another witness heard him say that he was on a log and he slipped into the fire. On cross examination, the father testified that the child was of average intelligence, that he had instructed him about, and he thought the child understood, the danger of fire; that from the statement he made, the child was putting out the fire at the time, and that he knew that the child knew what a fire was.
The jury was unable to agree upon a verdict and a mistrial was ordered; subsequently, the defendant moved for a final judgment in accordance with his prior motion for directed verdict, and that motion was granted and judgment entered.
The district court, after quoting the rule of liability mentioned in Cockerham v. R.E. Vaughn, Inc., Fla.,
Parenthetically, it was not revealed in the evidence when, with relation to the child's age or the injury, the father had instructed the child about the danger of fire, nor the substance of the instruction.
Plaintiffs contend that the court erred in entering judgment for the defendant, and in refusing a charge dealing with the standard of conduct to be reasonably expected of a child.
As may be seen from the quoted matter, the court concluded that, the child being aware of the existence of the fire, and because of prior instructions from his father, he realized the dangerous risk involved in intermeddling in it or coming within the area made dangerous by it.
While the fact that a child has been warned of a danger may be enough to defeat his recovery, where it is found to be effective in making him fully aware of the situation, it is appreciation of the danger which is required to bar recovery, rather than mere knowledge of the existence of the condition itself, and where the child is too young to understand, or not sufficiently impressed to forego the attractive hazard, the warning may be found not to relieve the defendant of liability, if he could reasonably be expected to do more. Prosser on Torts, 3rd Edition, page 382.
We find conflict and quash the decision here reviewed
From our examination of the record it appears to us that it was a question for the jury whether the instruction given the minor plaintiff by his father was effective in making him fully aware of the situation or appreciative of the danger of the condition, it being fairly safe to say that generally parents instruct their children early in their lives about the danger of fire and other common dangers.
The minor in Tucker Brothers, Inc. v. Menard, Fla.,
*23 Relating the present case to the above decision, one of the parents had instructed the child about the danger of fire. The piles of brush included complete trees; there were large logs that did not burn, which were criss-crossed on the pile. The propensity of children to climb and walk on trees and logs is common knowledge. As to the "fire," the owner testified that when he departed there was very little flame, but there were coals, and a passerby later saw smoke and several large logs, not flaming, but with red coals underneath. It is difficult to apply in this situation the obvious peril doctrine, 38 Am.Jur., Negligence § 151, p. 818, since the trees and logs bridged over the coals suggest a hidden or latent danger.
One of the reasons given for directing a verdict in Fouraker v. Mullis, Fla.App.,
A boy five years and four months old, as set out in Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Lester,
It was for the trier of the facts whether or not this minor plaintiff sufficiently discovered the condition or realized the risk involved. The mere knowledge that he had of the existence of the fire, and the mere fact that sometime in the past he had been instructed about the danger of fire, does not necessarily mean that he realized the risk involved in intermeddling in it or in coming within the area made dangerous by it. Because of his immaturity and want of judgment a child may be incapable of understanding and appreciating, or making intelligent decisions on, all of the possible dangers which he may encounter.
An examination of the instruction proffered by the plaintiff and refused by the court, to wit, "A child of tender years may be expected to conform only to that standard of conduct that is to be reasonably *24 expected of a child of its age, intelligence and experience under like circumstances," adequately states the care to be expected from a child and should have been given. Larnel Builders, Inc. v. Martin, Fla.,
The decision under review is quashed, with directions to remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings.
THORNAL, C.J., O'CONNELL and ERVIN, JJ., and WARREN, Circuit Judge, concur.
CALDWELL, J., dissents.
