74 N.J.L. 627 | N.J. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action in tort by a little child, by her next friend, to recover for injuries resulting from being run down on a crosswalk by a team of horses driven by the servant of the defendant. The child was seven years old at the trial, and the accident was some sixteen months prior thereto. The exact age of the child does not appear.
The trial judge rightly held that contributory negligence could not be imputed to her.
When plaintiff rested there was a nonsuit.
The proof then was that the child was upon the crosswalk, crossing the street, following her mother, who had already crossed. The child was at the time of the. accident about in the middle of the street. The servant of the defendant was driving a team of horses to a loaded wagon, and was traveling, at the time of the accident, on a slow walk. With him on the wagon was a colored man. There is .no proof that they were talking, or that the driver was-not giving attention to his horses. The wagon did not go over the child. The horses only hit her. On this state of facts the trial judge nonsuited, saying:
“We must have something more, something to show want of care on the part of the driver, something beyond a mere inference founded on these naked facts, some positive testimony showing some act of inattention or want of care — evidence, for instance, that the driver was looking elsewhere, that he was not minding his business, that he was asleep or intoxicated, or what not. How can the court or the jury predicate a charge of negligence on the bare fact that a walking horse knocks a person down in the middle of the street ?”
If this is a correct view of the law as applicable to this case, the nonsuit was right. But we think it was not.
On the question of negligence in a driver of horses attached lo a vehicle upon the public street, it is of little concern whether he be going fast or slow, except as speed may be an element of negligence. The question, in either event, is whether he was in the exercise of reasonable care and caution in approaching the crossing, and in looking out for persons upon the highway, to prevent injury to them. If the driver of a team'of horses on a walk runs over a child at a crosswalk, it would seem to raise a reasonable inference for the jury whether he was not negligent. The jury may infer negligence
In this case the driver was either looking ox he was not. If looking, he must have seen the child, and, going at the slow pace he was, it is reasonably inferable that he would, if he had exercised reasonable care, have averted the accident.
If he ran the child down, even if going slow, when he was not looking, of course, that is evidence from which the jury may find negligence.
In either event, we think the question of the negligence of the driver, under the proof when the plaintiff rested, was for ihe jury.
In Kaufman v. Bush, Mr. Justice Garrison said: “If from the testimony the jury found, as they might, that ihe plaintiff had reached the crossing first, and was using it at a time when the driver of the approaching vehicle ought to have seen her, and could, by exercising proper care over a horse that was under proper control, have either stopped or turned aside, so as to avoid running her down, a case of negligence was sufficiently made' out.”
The age of the plaintiff, while it does not, per se, alter the rule by which the negligence of the driver is to be gauged, is a circumstance to be taken into consideration in measuring the sort of care he was exercising and in determining what inferences should be drawn from the other facts respecting the accident. Kaufman v. Bush, 40 Vroom 645, 648.
The nonsuit was error, and the judgment of the Essex Circuit is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
For reversal — Ti-ie Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Fort, Garretson, Hendrickson, Pitney, Swayze, Reed, Trenohard, Bogert, Yredenburgi-i, Yroom, Green, Gray', Dill, J.J. 16.