The opinion of the court was delivered by
The first question raised in the case that calls for an expression of opinion is the admissibility of the city ordinance. The accident occurred before the passage of the act of 1915 (Pamph. L., p. 285), and the case is therefore controlled b3r the act of 1906 (Comp. Stat., p. 3426), if applicable. The point made is that the ordinance conflicts with the statute. Section 2,2 of the statute enacts that no owner, purchaser or driver of a motor vehicle shall be excluded or prohibited from, or excluded or limited in the free use thereof, nor limited as
The city ordinance requires that the driver of a vehicle, when passing a street car while it is stopping to take on or discharge passengers, shall keep at least four feet from the right-hand running board or lowest step of the car, shall give audible indication of his approach, and exercise due precaution not to interfere with or injure passengers getting on or off the ear; and that if by reason of the presence of other vehicles, or by reason of the narrowness of the street, or any other reason, it is not possible to preserve such distance of four feet, the driver shall bring his vehible to a full stop until the car shall have taken on or discharged its passengers and again started. The trial judge lightly construed this as requiring the vehicle overtaking a street ear, which had stopped to receive or discharge passengers, to pass on the right and not on tlie left as provided by the road law and by section 22 of the Motor Vehicle act of 1906.
' As to- section 22 it is enough to say, with tlie trial judge, that it clearly applies only to motor vehicles, carriages, sleighs or sleds, and that section 1 of the same act excludes from the statutory definition of motor vehicles such as run only upon rails or tracks.
'The difficulty arises out of tlie statutory provisions already cited forbidding municipal ordinances limiting or restricting the use or speed of motor vehicles.
That the failure to obey the city ordinance was evidence from which a jury might infer negligence is settled by the principle of our decision in Evers v. Davis, 86 N. J. L. 196. A city ordinance is as evidential in this respect as a statute. It is, as we have held, evidential but not conclusive. State v. Schutte, 88 Id. 396. It is not important that the child was only ten years old. If it. was negligent, as the jury might find, to turn to the left, the act would remain negligent whether a child or an adult was injured. If the child might otherwise properly have been found guilty of contributory negligence, that finding might bo prevented by the principle that one may properly assume that the law will be obeyed. Durant v. Palmer, 29 Id. 544; Suburban Electric Co. v. Nugent, 58 Id. 658. A child’s rights in this respect are no less than the rights of an adult. It can make no difference that the regulation was probably meant primarily to safeguard passengers. Every one is entitled to rely on all safeguards provided by law, no matter what motive may have actuated tire legal authorities. The case is not one of contract but of tort, and if a negligent act is a tort as to one, it is a tort as to all who may be injured thereby.
Let the judgment be affirmed, with costs.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, Garrison, Swayze, Parker, Bergen, Minturn, Kalisch, White, Heppenheimer, Williams, Taylor, Gardner, JJ. 12.
For reversal — None.