138 Iowa 390 | Iowa | 1908
'Defendants were conducting a store in the city of Cedar Rapids, in the year 1906, whereat they sold gunpowder and other explosives. At the time in question plaintiff was five days over twelve years of age. He was small of stature and inexperienced in the use of explosives. He was still wearing short trousers, .and had never seen any one use gunpowder, save on the Fourth of - July, 1905, and on the day of the accident in question. He had never used firearms of any sort, and a jury may have found that he did not have the ordinary experience of boys of his
II. Bearing upon the issue of plaintiff’s contributory negligence, is the following from .the testimony of the plaintiff:
2. same: care re?añts?evi-m’ dence. I took the powder home, and met two boys, and we went down to the brewery, and we met another boy, Fred Trego. He got me the can and nail, and we put a hole in it, and then we put a fire cracker fuse in it, then powder, and then paper, and then some sand to keep it in there. As I went to strike a match, the spark flew on the fuse there, and just as I stooped over it, it flew up and hit me in the eye. Q. What did you go down there to get powder for? A. I seen some bigger boys do it, and I went and did it, too. , Q. How many times did you see the bigger boys shoot it off? A. They were shooting it off the year before up near our house, and the same day before I got the powder, why there was Theodore Nesper shooting it off, on Seventh street and D avenue aside of the brewery. They were shooting it in a can. It was in the afternoon. I don’t know how many times they shot it off. I just went past there, and I seen them. I asked them where they got it, and he said at Drew’s and I said before that, ‘ They don’t sell it any place else, do they ? ’ Theodore Nesper and a little boy by the name of Winke was there shooting this can of gunpowder. I saw them shoot it twice while I was there. The year before, the shooting was up on A avenue and Eighth street near our house. Walter Barlow was shooting it. He had a can. Q. How did they shoot it ? just tell the jury. A. The same way, put it. They had a hole in the top of the can, and took a fire cracker fuse, and put it in there, and then put powder in, then put paper so it wouldn’t go out, and then put sand in it so as to keep it there, then put a little around the top — a little*394 powder around the top. And they light thé fuse with a match. They used fuse out of one of these little fire crackers. Q. Did you ever see any one shoot these cans other times than that ? A. No-, sir. That is the only time I ever saw them shoot. The year before they shot it four or five times. When I got the powder, I went up near the slough, near the brewery. The can that they used there the year before was a regular corn can, a tomato can, a tin can. They put a hole in it with a nail, just big enough for the fuse to go in, or the fire cracker to go in, and they put in powder, and then paper to keep it in there, and then sand on top of the paper. They put powder in cans, and then put paper, and put sand, and turned it over. Then a little powder on-top where the fuse is, then light the fuse. Q. When they lit the fuse, what did they do then ? A. The can would go away up in the air. Q. But what did they do when they lit the fuse ? A. Just stand over to the side. I saw them do that four or five times. They would go back some 10-feet. They would light the fuse, and then step back some 10 feet, and the can would go up in the air. The day before I bought the powder, Theodore Nesper and Will Winke were shooting it in the same way. -When I got the powder, I didn’t go home with it. I was going down Seventh street, and met the boys. I was looking for a can to put it in, and they got me a can. Van Norman and Sam Moore went along with us. When we got the can, we went down by the slough. We shot the can off three times, and then went over to the Illinois Central track, and we shot it off over there two or three times. We put in fuse, and put in some powder, and then paper, and then sand. And some powder around the top, and lit it. We turned it over before we lit- it. Q. When yon lit it, did you jump back ? A. Yes, sir. About the same distance as the boy did a year before, some 10 or 12 feet. The can would go up in the air.- We did that the same way twice down to the brewery, then we went up to the Illinois Central track, and did it the same way. The last time the can struck me in the face. The last time we loaded it the same way we always did. Q. How far did you run away from it before it exploded ? A. I lit it, struck a match, and a spark flew on it, and just as I went over to light it and it flew up and hit me in the face. Q. When you struck your match, and the head of it flew on it ?*395 A. Yes, sir. Q. Then it exploded, before you got down to light? A. Yes, sir. Q, What were you striking the match on? A. On the side of my pants. Q. And you were close to the can ? A. Yes, sir. Q, And the lighting of the match threw a spark on the powder and exploded it before you really had it lit, is that it? A. Yes, sir. I was right over the can when it flew up. I was just about to light it. Q. Had you ever bought powder before this time ? A. No, sir. I never had any powder before this. I never seen anybody use any powder other than I told about the boys shooting up the can. I have no firearms. I never use any firearms.
In this connection it must be remembered that plaintiff was but five days over twelve years of age. The general rule, with reference to the care required of an infant, is that degree which children of the same age Ordinarily exercise under the same, circumstances, taking into account the age, experience, capacity, and understanding of the child. Fishburn v. Railroad, 127 Iowa, 483.
Assimilating the rule which applies in criminal cases to civil ones, it has been held that children under seven years of age are incapable of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and that children between seven and fourteen are presumed incapable of contributory negligence, although the contrary may be shown. We seem to be committed to this rule, at least to a limited extent. See Doggett v. C., B. & Q. R. R., 134 Iowa, 690. Although we have also affirmed the doctrine that even children are bound to exercise that degree of care which children of the same age ordinarily exercise under similar circumstances, if the doctrine of presumption applies, then the case was clearly one for a jury; the presumption standing as sufficient until met by testimony from the defendant. If the other rule obtains, we still think the question was one of fact for a jury, rather than of law for the court. The testimony tended to show that plaintiff was simply imitating the older boys with whom he was at play; that he did not realize or comprehend the dangers incident
The trial court was in error in directing a verdict, and the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.