78 P. 753 | Or. | 1904
delivered the opinion.
This is a statutory action for damages for the death of an infant aged four..years and six months. The plaintiff is the father of the child, and sues as administrator of his estate. On March 19, 1903, while the boy was playing with other children on a pile of round sticks or piles in the street in front of the defendant’s property, the piling rolled down and crushed him, causing his .instant death. The piles belonged to O’Reilly, and, with the consent of the city authorities, were placed in the street by him, or at his direction, to be subsequently used in the construction of a building on his premises adjacent thereto. The defendant had contracted with a pile-driving firm for the driving of the piles, and it was engaged at the time of the accident in making preparations for beginning its work.
The briefs of both sides contain unusually full and able arguments on the general question of imputed negligence, and as to when and under what circumstances the negligence of the legal custodian of a person non sui juris, contributing to his injury or death, will be imputed to such person or his beneficiary in an action to recover damages therefor. It is agreed by counsel that, according to the great weight of modern authority, the negligence of the legal custodian of such a pers’on will not be imputed to it or bar an action for or on its behalf, and that the doctrine of Hartfield v. Roper, 21 Wend. 615 (34 Am. Dec. 273), has
It is not necessary for us to decide this question, interesting and important as it is. There was ho evidence whatever on the trial that the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the death of his minor child, and there is no sufficient ground upon which the negligence of the mother can be imputed to the father, any more than the negligence of the parents can be imputed to the child.
Atlanta & C. A. L. Ry. Co. v. Gravitt, 93 Ga. 369 (20 S. E. 550, 26 L. R. A. 553, 44. Am. St. Rep. 145), was an action by a mother to recover damages for the death of her child, occurring under circumstances of concurring negligence on the part of the custodian of the child selected by the father, and the defendant. In the light of the facts, the court said that the father would be precluded from recovery, and that as to him the case was the same as if he himself “had deliberately led his son into the death trap,” but that the custodian of the child was not the agent of the mother, although selected by the father with her knowledge and without protest, nor would the negligence of her husband be imputed to her. This case, although criticised by counsel for the plaintiff, is, to our minds, a remarkably full and able discussion of the entire doctrine of imputed negligence and the grounds upon which it is
Davis v. Guarnieri, 45 Ohio St. 470 (15 N. E. 350, 4 Am. St. Rep. 548), was an action by a husband, as administrator of his wife’s estate, against a druggist who had given a dangerous drug by mistake to the husband, which drug the husband had administered to his wife, causing death. The defendant set up contributory negligence on the part of the husband, and the court held that the doctrine of imputed negligence did not prevail in Ohio, and that contributory negligence of the husband in purchasing the drug would not be imputed to the wife in an action by her or her administrator against the dealer for injury or death resulting from the use of such drug, unless “ she constituted him her agent,” and that by simply making known to her husband her desire for the medicine, by reason of which he obtained it, she did not make him her agent in such sense that his contributory negligence in making the purchase could be imputed to her: Louisville N. A. etc. R. Co. v. Creek, 130 Ind. 139 (29 N. E. 481, 14 L. R. A. 733), was an action by a husband as administrator of his wife’s estate. She was killed at a railway crossing while driving with her husband, the husband’s negligence
The principle underlying all these cases is, as already stated, that contributory negligence, in order to be a defense, must be that of a person through whom the cause of action -is derived, or for whose benefit it is prosecuted, or some authorized agent or representative. Or perhaps as better said by Mr. Justice Mitchell in Town of Knightstown v. Musgrove, 116 Ind. 121 (18 N. E. 452, 9 Am. St. Rep. 827): “Before the concurrent negligence of a third person can be interposed to shield another, whose neglect of duty has occasioned an injury to one who was without personal fault, it must appear that the person injured and the one whose negligence contributed to the injury sustained such a relation to each other in respect to the matter then in
This point was not made in Hedin v. Suburban Ry. Co. 26 Or. 155 (37 Pac. 540), and, of course, that decision is not an authority one way or the other. The cases cited by the appellant, holding that the negligence of the mother will be imputed to the father, are all, we believe, from states where the doctrine of imputed negligence, in one /form or another, existed at the time the decisions cited Vere made: Higgins v. Deeney, 78 Cal. 578 (21 Pac. 428);
2. It is unimportant, we take it, whether, as an academic question, the courts can properly hold that an infant child of any given age is, as a matter of law, non sui juris, or whether that question is always one of fact. There has been a time in the life of every person of mature judgment, as all agree, when he was incapable of exercising the care and judgment necessary to avoid or avert danger, and was non sui juris. There is a time, also, when he is, in law, an adult, and responsible as such. Between these two periods is a transition stage, during which his capacity is a matter of fact for the jury : Dubiver v. City Ry. Co. 44 Or. 227 (74 Pac. 915, 75 Pac. 693). What age is sufficient to constitute a child sui juris is a difficult question, and has been a fruitful source of controversy in the courts, and no definite or fixed age has ever, so far as we are advised, been agreed upon. Unless the child is of very tender years, the question is ordinarily left to the jury to determine the measure of care required by that particular child under the circumstances of the case: 1 Thompson, Negligence, § 313. But whatever the rule may be, no one will, we apprehend, contend that a child of the age of plaintiff’s intestate — four and one half years — has reached such a degree of judgment, intelligence, or discretion as to be deemed capable of negligence in playing on a pile of lumber or timber left in the public street near his home. The court therefore properly so declared to the jury, even if the question is one of fact: State v. Morey, 25 Or. 244 (35 Pac. 655, 36 Pac. 573). And if it was one of law, there
3. The law is that where one contracts with another to do work which may he done in a lawful manner, and has no choice in the selection of the workmen, and no control over the manner of doing the work, except as to the result to be obtained, he will not, as a general rule, be liable for the negligence of the contractor or his servants, because the doctrine respondeat superior will not apply: 2 Dillon, Munic. Corp. (4 ed.) § 1028; Blumb v. City of Kansas, 84 Mo. 112 (54 Am. Rep. 87); Long v. Moon, 107 Mo. 334 (17 S. W. 810); Bibb’s Adm’r v. Norfolk & W. R. Co. 87 Va. 711 (14 S. E. 163). As we understand the record, however, the liability of an independent contractor was not involved in this case, unless the pile-driving contractor had taken possession of, and was responsible for the condition of, the piles at the time. The piles belonged to the defendant, and were by his direction placed in' the street, where they remained three or four weeks prior to the accident. Because he paid the teamster at a certain rate per foot for hauling them from the river did not exonerate the defendant from liability for the manner in which the piles were placed in the street, any more than if he had been paid by the day.
4. Nor did the fact that the defendant had previously let the contract to a pile-driving firm to' drive the piles make such contractor liable for the injury caused by the
5, The photographs offered and admitted in evidence on behalf of the plaintiff were taken on the day following the accident. The testimony shows that they were exact reproductions of the premises as they were before the accident, with the exception of the logs or piling, which had been rolled down by some of the employés of the pile-driving contractor. These photographs were not a true representation of the condition of the piling at the time of the accident, but it was impossible for them to have misled the jury or to have prejudiced the rights of the defendant in any way, and therefore their admission was harmless.
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed. '
Affirmed.