28 Del. 376 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1915
charging the jury.
Gentlemen of the jury:—This action was brought by Paul C. Igle, a minor by his next friend, his father Matthias L. Igle, the plaintiff, against the Peoples Railway Company, the defendant, to recover damages occasioned by a collision between an electric car of the defendant company and an ice wagon in which the plaintiff was riding as a passenger, at the intersection of Second and Franklin Streets in the City of Wilmington, on the twelfth day of October, 1912.
The plaintiff claims that the injuries resulted from the negligence of the defendant, and charges that the negligence arose from the excessive speed of the car, the failure to give reasonable and proper warning of the approach of the car, that the car was intrusted to the care of an incompetent and unskillful motorman, and that the motorman did not make reasonable and proper efforts to stop the car. We feel it our duty to say that in this case there is no proof to show that the motorman in control of the car in question was incompetent or unskillful.
To all these charges the defendant company pleads' not guilty, and as a defense claims that the speed of the car was mod-
Of the facts you are the sole judges, and from the evidence, and that alone you are to make up your verdict. It is the province of the court to instruct you regarding the law.
The general rule is that the person managing the car and the person approaching the crossing are bound to the reasonable use of their senses of sight and hearing for the prevention of accident, and also to the exercise of all such reasonable caution as ordinarily careful and prudent persons would exercise in like circumstances.
The plaintiff however would be entitled to recover notwithstanding there had been some negligence on his part if it was the negligence of the defendant company alone that was the proximate or immediate cause of the injury.
It is the duty of a person riding with the driver of a vehicle to exercise due care and caution and it is no less his duty than the driver’s, where he has the opportunity to do so, to learn of the danger and to avoid it if practicable.
In determining the question whether the plaintiff, who was a youth of a little more than fourteen years of age, was himself guilty of contributory negligence, you are to consider whether at the time of the accident, he was exercising that degree of care and caution which a reasonably prudent person of his age, development and maturity would exercise under like circumstances. While the rule as to contributory negligence is modified as to children, nevertheless it is the duty of children to exercise that degree of care to avoid injuries which children of the same age are accustomed to exercise under like circumstances, and the maturity and capacity of the infant, his ability to understand and appreciate the danger, and his familiarity with the surroundings in each particular case are all matters to be taken into consideration in determining this question. Travers v. Hartman, ante, 302, 92 Atl. 855.
If from the evidence you should be satisfied that the plaintiff jumped from the wagon, he would not be entitled to recover because in all the allegations of the narr. filed by the plaintiff in this case he charges that he was thrown or jarred from the wagon.
Verdict for plaintiff.