115 Me. 282 | Me. | 1916
The plaintiff, a girl six years of age, while crossing Center street in Portland, at about noon of August 14, 1915, was struck and knocked down by an automobile driven by the defendant and thereby received severe bodily injuries, for which she seeks in this action to recover damages. The jury returned a verdict of $600 in her favor, and the case is before this court on defendanfs motion for a new trial.
The plaintiff had been, with other children, in the playground of the school yard nearly opposite her father’s house on Center street. Miss Marion Murphy was in attendance at the playground as a teacher or social worker, and the plaintiff left Miss Murphy at the gate, close to the sidewalk, to cross the street to her home. When she was near the middle of the street she was struck by the automobile' and her leg was broken and she was knocked down upon the paved street badly bruising her mouth, nose, and face. She was picked up by the defendant and taken in his car to the Maine General Hospital where she remained about four weeks, and after that she was treated at the Children’s Hospital, going there daily. At the trial, which occurred about seven months after the accident, her father testified that she “walks a little lame in that leg and she is a little hard of hearing.” She did not testify.
We do not know if the jury had occasion to determine whether the child’s parents were negligent in permitting her to be unattended in crossing the street; for that question was not involved in the case unless the jury decided that the child was too young to exercise care for herself. But if that question did arise in this case, we have no hesitancy in saying that a finding by a jury, that the parents of this child were not negligent in allowing her to go unattended from their house across- the street in the daytime to and from the school-yard playground, ought not to be set aside.
Motion overruled.