COREY AND CAROL NIELSEN, for and in behalf of C.N., a minor, Appellees, v. WADE AND LAURA BELL, on behalf of B.B., a minor Appellants.
No. 20131047
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
Filed March 24, 2016
2015 UT 14
On Appeal of Interlocutory Order, Third District, Salt Lake Dep‘t, The Honorable Denise P. Lindberg, No. 120903223
Daniel F. Bertch, Kevin K. Robson, Darren A. Davis, Nathan Langston, Salt Lake City, for appellees
Peter H. Christensen, Kathryn T. Smith, Salt Lake City, for appellants
JUSTICE DURHAM authored the opinion of the Court in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE HIMONAS, and JUDGE ROTH joined.
ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE filed a dissenting opinion.
JUSTICE PARRISH did not participate herein. Court of Appeals JUDGE STEPHEN L. ROTH sat.
JUSTICE DURHAM, opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
¶1 In this appeal we must decide whether there is a minimum age below which a child is conclusively deemed incapable of negligence under Utah‘s common law, and if so, what that minimum age is. We hold that children under the age of five, as a matter of law, may not be held liable for negligence.
BACKGROUND
¶2 Ms. Nielsen was babysitting a boy who was four years and nine months old. The boy threw a toy rubber dolphin at her, striking her in the eye. Ms. Nielsen had previously received a cornea transplant, and, tragically, the impact caused her to lose all vision in that eye.
¶3 Ms. Nielsen sued the boy‘s parents for negligent supervision. She also sued the four-year-old boy for negligence. The defendants moved for summary judgment, and Ms. Nielsen conceded that she had no evidence that the boy‘s parents had been negligent. She argued, however, that a dispute of material fact precluded summary judgment on the negligence claim against the boy. Ms. Nielsen further asserted that a four-year-old boy could be liable for negligence under Utah law. The district court agreed, ruling that it could not find as a matter of law that the boy was incapable of negligence. The court therefore granted summary judgment on the negligent supervision claim against the parents and denied summary judgment on the negligence claim against the child.
¶4 We granted a petition for interlocutory review of the portion of the district court‘s order denying summary judgment on the claim against the child. We review de novo the district court‘s legal determination that a four year old may be held liable for negligence. See Daniels v. Gamma W. Brachytherapy, LLC, 2009 UT 66, ¶ 46, 221 P.3d 256 (interpretations of the common law reviewed for correctness).
ANALYSIS
¶5 State courts have adopted a variety of approaches when determining whether young children may be held liable for negligence. Some states reject fixed age limits, resolving the issue of a child‘s capacity to be negligent as a matter of law only where “reasonable minds could not differ on the matter.” Lester v. Sayles, 850 S.W.2d 858, 866 (Mo. 1993). But “the overwhelming majority of jurisdictions support the idea of some minimum cutoff age.” RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 10 reporters’ note, cmt. d (AM. LAW INST. 2010). Courts in these states have adopted different cutoff ages for liability, variously holding that children under seven, six, five, or four may not be negligent as a matter of law. Id.
¶6 In order to determine whether the four-year-old defendant in this case may be held liable for negligently throwing a toy at Ms. Nielsen, we assess which of these approaches to the liability of young children most closely matches this court‘s
¶7 We reject the defendant‘s contention that this court has held that children under seven may not be negligent. We agree, however, with the defendant‘s alternative argument that children under the age of five may not be liable for negligence. We therefore reverse the district court‘s order denying summary judgment on the negligence claim against the four-year-old defendant.
I. THE ILLINOIS RULE
¶8 The defendant first contends that Utah has adopted the Illinois rule regarding the liability of young children for negligence. Under this rule, children under seven are deemed incapable of negligence; for children between seven and fourteen, there is a rebuttable presumption against a child‘s capacity for negligence; and for adolescents fourteen years old and above there is a rebuttable presumption of capacity for negligence. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 10 cmt. b (AM. LAW INST. 2010). The Illinois rule is followed in about a dozen states. See id. § 10 reporters’ note, cmt. b.
¶9 This court first referenced this rule in Nelson v. Arrowhead Freight Lines, 104 P.2d 225, 228 (Utah 1940). But although the Nelson court stated that “[o]rdinarily a child under seven years of age is conclusively presumed not guilty of contributory negligence,” this pronouncement was pure dictum.1 Id. The minor accused of contributory negligence in that case was sixteen—well above the
¶10 We specifically held that the Nelson court‘s articulation of the Illinois rule was dictum and declined to follow it. In Mann v. Fairbourn, this court had to decide whether a five-and-a-half-year-old boy could be contributorily negligent in an accident that caused his death. 366 P.2d 603, 604, 606 (Utah 1961). We acknowledged our prior statement in Nelson that children under seven may not be negligent, but reasoned that “the statement was mere dictum inasmuch as the plaintiffs in that case were 16 and 20 years at age” and that “[s]uch a rule of law has not been observed by this court in other cases.” Id. at 606. The Mann court held that the capacity for negligence of the five-year-old plaintiff was a factual inquiry to be resolved by a jury. Id. In subsequent cases we continued to ignore the Nelson dictum and held that a jury should decide whether a six and-a-half year old and a child just under six had the capacity to be negligent. Donohue v. Rolando, 400 P.2d 12, 13–14 (Utah 1965); Rivas v. Pac. Fin. Co., 397 P.2d 990, 991–92 (Utah 1964).
¶11 Despite this court‘s refusal to apply the Illinois rule, however, we later used at least a portion of that rule. In Kilpack v. Wignall, we had to determine as a matter of law whether a seven year old had the capacity to be negligent. 604 P.2d 462, 463, 465–66 (Utah 1979). The Kilpack court ignored our caselaw that either explicitly rejected or disregarded the Nelson dictum and quoted the Nelson opinion‘s articulation of the Illinois rule. Id. at 466. Because the child plaintiff in Kilpack was seven, this court then applied a presumption that he was incapable of contributory negligence. Id. We held that because no evidence was presented to rebut this presumption of incapacity, the seven-year-old plaintiff was not negligent as a matter of law. Id.
¶12 The holding of the Kilpack opinion, however, does not control in this case. In Kilpack, we applied the Illinois rule‘s rebuttable presumption that children between the ages of seven and fourteen are incapable of negligence. We had no occasion to apply the rule‘s conclusive presumption that children under seven are not liable for negligence. Indeed, when this court has been presented
¶13 We therefore reject the defendant‘s assertion that Utah has recognized a conclusive presumption that children under seven are incapable of negligence.2 Statements we have made to this effect are dicta, and this court has explicitly refused to follow this rule when the issue has been squarely presented. Mann, 366 P.2d at 606.
II. THE RESTATEMENT RULE
¶14 Although this court has never held that children under seven may not be held liable for negligence, we have recognized that there is an age at which a child is “so young and immature as to require the court to judicially know that he is not responsible for his act.” Donohue v. Rolando, 400 P.2d 12, 14 (Utah 1965). But we have not yet explicitly held what the cutoff age for negligence liability is. This court has previously decided this question on an ad hoc basis. An examination of our caselaw, though, reveals a dividing line between children under the age of five and children aged five and above.
¶15 As noted above, when we have examined the capacity of five and six year olds to be negligent we have held that it was a jury question unless reasonable minds could not differ on the issue. Donohue, 400 P.2d at 13–14; Rivas, 397 P.2d at 991–92; Mann, 366 P.2d at 604, 606. We have found only one opinion in which this court has assessed the capacity of a child under five to be negligent. In Herald v. Smith, a motorist struck a four-year-and-ten-month-old girl while she was crossing the street. 190 P. 932, 933 (Utah 1920). The girl sued the motorist for negligence. Id. at 932. After the trial, the district court directed a defense verdict after apparently concluding that the evidence could only support a finding that the child‘s negligence
¶16 Granted, the procedural posture of Herald makes it a less than ideal signpost for determining the minimum age for negligence liability under Utah‘s common law. The Herald court reversed the trial court‘s legal conclusion that the child plaintiff had been negligent. Notably, we were not affirming a lower court‘s legal determination that a child had not been negligent. Herald indicates, however, that this court‘s conclusion that the four-year-old plaintiff was not capable of negligence was arrived at “as a matter of law.” Id. In line with this legal determination, Herald further held that the resolution of a factual dispute at trial as to whether the motorist sounded his horn before the accident would not affect its conclusion that the child did not have the capacity to be negligent, reasoning that an “ordinary child of that age could neither appreciate nor understand the object sought or the reasons for giving such warning.” Id. at 934. We therefore held that upon remand, the child plaintiff was entitled to submit to a jury the question of whether the motorist had negligently caused the accident, further indicating that the Herald opinion had resolved the contributory negligence issue in favor of the child plaintiff as a matter of law. Id.
¶17 The Herald court‘s holding that a girl two months shy of her fifth birthday could not be negligent marks a dividing line with subsequent cases holding that five year olds could have the capacity to be negligent. See Rivas, 397 P.2d at 991–92; Mann, 366 P.2d at 604, 606. This division matches the line drawn by the Restatement (Third) of Torts, which states: “A child less than five years of age is incapable of negligence.” RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 10(b) (AM. LAW INST. 2010). The restatement rule is consistent with the rule adopted by the majority of states, which holds that children under the age of at least five (several states have a higher age limit) may not be held liable for negligence. Id. § 10 reporters’ note, cmt. d. The restatement authors note that “only in a tiny handful of states are there actual cases that have permitted findings of negligence in the conduct of children who are less than five.” Id.
¶18 A number of policy considerations support the restatement rule. Children under the age of five have a limited capacity to appreciate how their actions can cause harm to themselves or others and have an inadequate internal ability to
¶19 Of course, categorical rules are, by their nature, imperfect. Children develop at different rates, and some four year olds are undoubtedly more mature than some five year olds. Despite the inherent drawbacks of age-based rulemaking, however, we must engage in this line-drawing process to some extent. Legislatures have done so by setting the age at which individuals can work, drive, marry, vote, serve in the military, smoke, and drink alcohol, as well as establishing the age of consent. Courts also make hard, age-based rules. The Supreme Court has determined that the Constitution prohibits the execution of an “adolescent” who commits murder just days before his eighteenth birthday, but permits the death penalty for an “adult” who commits the same crime just days after turning eighteen. Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 578 (2005); see also id. at 574 (rejecting objections to drawing a hard line at eighteen). This court has also created age-based rules as part of the common law—finding that parent‘s waiver of a minor‘s prospective claim for negligence is unenforceable, for example. Hawkins ex rel. Hawkins v. Peart, 2001 UT 94, ¶ 13, 37 P.3d 1062. And although statutes now establish the age of majority, determining the age when individuals assume independent legal rights, such as the capacity to contract, was a common law function. 42 AM. JUR. 2D Infants § 4 (2010); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 14 cmt. a (AM. LAW INST. 1981).
¶20 In each of these instances the advantages of uniformity, consistency, and efficiency justify a bright-line rule, despite its imperfections. Determining the appropriate age at which each of these rules should be applied on an individualized, case-by-case basis—e.g., conducting a review process to determine when every person is mature enough to vote or consent to sexual relations—would be so inefficient and create such uncertainty as to be
¶21 We conclude that the instances where it would be appropriate to hold a child under the age of five liable for negligence would be rare enough that the social costs of conducting an individualized inquiry are not justified. Litigants are entitled to some amount of certainty and consistency. And this court has the duty to consider the propriety of subjecting children of tender years to tort liability, or, when they are plaintiffs, denying them recovery for the negligence of others.
¶22 We therefore adopt the restatement rule that children under the age of five may not be held liable for negligence. The question of whether a child five or over is capable of negligence is reserved for the fact-finder, unless a court determines that no reasonable jury could disagree on the issue. Such a rule conforms with our precedents and promotes important public policies.
CONCLUSION
¶23 We reverse the district court‘s order denying summary judgment in favor of the four-year-old defendant. We remand with instructions to grant summary judgment.
NIELSEN v. BELL
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
Filed March 24, 2016
2016 UT 14
JUSTICE LEE, dissenting
¶24 The court today adopts a categorical rule exempting children under the age of five from a finding of negligence in tort. It bases that conclusion on both legal authority and its own assessments of cognitive psychology. I agree with some of the court‘s premises. I accept the need for a categorical age cutoff at some point. And I have no doubt that many children under the age of five are incapable of negligence in some activities. But I respectfully dissent from the court‘s adoption of a categorical cutoff at age five because I disagree with the conclusion that “the instances where it would be appropriate to hold a child under the age of five liable for negligence” are “rare enough that the social costs of conducting an individualized inquiry” into a child defendant‘s mental capacity for negligence “are not justified.” Supra ¶ 21.
¶25 This is not a question for disposition “as a matter of law” by reference to an aging body of caselaw. It is, at bottom, a question of social science. The relevant field of social science (cognitive psychology), moreover, is one that has seen significant advances in recent years. For that reason it seems perilous to defer too quickly to the armchair assessments of a child‘s analytical capacity made by judges in decades past.
¶26 I would take a fresh look at the age at which a child may properly be charged with negligence. I would do so based on a careful assessment of the state of our current understanding of the field of cognitive psychology. Recent advances in that field undercut the premises of the standard endorsed by the majority. Cognitive psychologists do not view all children aged five or older as fully capable of the kind of thinking necessary to charge them with negligence; nor do they see all children four or younger as categorically incapable of that kind of thinking. Instead they generally agree that children begin to develop cognitive skills like planning and impulse control at about age three, and continue developing those skills as they grow older. And although experts in this field have identified developmental and environmental factors that explain why different children develop at different rates, they also generally agree that most children acquire the ability to engage in planning and impulse control by the age of eight.
¶27 With this in mind, I would reject the age five cutoff adopted by this court and others. I would embrace instead a framework that would deem all children under the age of three
¶28 As noted below, I find nothing in the caselaw in this field that would sustain the cutoff endorsed by the court. The cases adopting a five-year (or seven-year) cutoff for negligence in other jurisdictions are based mostly on armchair assessments of cognitive psychology advanced by judges. To the extent the cases cite any literature from any relevant fields of expertise, moreover, the citations are to outdated science. And despite the majority‘s insistence to the contrary, our court has never held “‘as a matter of law‘” that a four-year-old is “not capable of negligence.” Supra ¶ 16 (quoting Herald v. Smith, 190 P. 932, 933 (Utah 1920)).
¶29 Even if the cited case could be understood to have embraced such a holding, I would not be inclined to defer to it on this appeal. The Herald case is almost a century old. And our understanding of cognitive psychology has advanced markedly in the many decades since that decision. A reconsideration of the question of where to draw the line on an age cutoff for negligence is past due. I would do so here. And I would adopt a framework that would deem the four-year-old defendant in this case presumptively incapable of negligence, subject to rebuttal on remand by expert testimony to be presented by the plaintiffs.
I
¶30 The majority‘s approach finds support in judicial decisions of our sister states. But I cannot agree that this court has held that a child under the age of five is incapable of negligence as a matter of law. See supra ¶ 16 (discussing Herald v. Smith, 190 P. 932 (1920)). And in any event I would not defer to the outdated, unsupported analysis of this important question in the decades-old caselaw in this or other jurisdictions.
A
¶31 The majority correctly concludes that this court has never expressly adopted “a conclusive presumption that children under seven are incapable of negligence.” Supra ¶ 13. And it rightly concedes that our past cases “have not yet explicitly held what the cutoff age for negligence liability is,” but have instead “decided this question on an ad hoc basis.” Supra ¶ 14. Yet the court also asserts that our cases have implicitly adopted “a dividing line between children under the age of five and children aged five and above.” Id.
¶32 I read Herald differently. The Herald court‘s analysis of the child plaintiff‘s capacity for contributory negligence had nothing to do with establishing a categorical age cutoff as a matter of law. In fact the court espoused the opposite view—that “[t]he degree of care required of a child must be graduated to its age, capacity, and experience, and must be measured by what might ordinarily be expected from a child of like age, capacity, and experience under similar conditions.” 190 P. at 933-34 (quoting Gesas v. O.S.L. R.R., 93 P. 274, 279 (Utah 1907)). To the extent Herald was endorsing a generally applicable rule, then, it was one counter to the age cutoff adopted by the court today—a rule under which the four-year-old plaintiff could not “be charged with contributory negligence” “[i]f it acted as might reasonably be expected of such a child” of her age. Id. at 934 (citation omitted).
¶33 The Herald court‘s assessment of the child plaintiff‘s contributory negligence was not based on a categorical analysis of the cognitive capacity of young children. It was based purely on the facts and circumstances of that case.
¶34 The Herald court‘s holding was a rejection of the theory of contributory negligence advanced by the defendant in the case. That theory was a stretch—that the defendant driver of a car “had a right to assume” that the child pedestrian “would not move forward” “when he blew the horn” on his car, and that the child plaintiff was therefore negligent because she disregarded the horn. Id. at 933. In rejecting that theory, the Herald court did not adopt a blanket rule of immunity. It concluded only that “[t]he defendant‘s duty to the plaintiff cannot be measured by what he might reasonably have expected to be the conduct of an adult person in such circumstances.” Id.
¶35 In rejecting the defendant‘s theory of contributory negligence, moreover, the court was not assessing the cognitive
Under the circumstances and facts of this case it is immaterial whether such alarm [the defendant‘s horn] was given or not. The plaintiff was a little girl not yet five years of age. The ordinary child of that age could neither appreciate nor understand the object sought or the reasons for giving such warning. If it made any impression at all upon her mind, she probably accepted it as for her amusement rather than anything else; in other words, we regard the fact as to whether defendant sounded the horn as immaterial. It would in no way relieve the defendant of the charge of negligence, if he was negligent in going forward after he observed the child crossing the street, nor would it charge the plaintiff with contributory negligence.
Id. at 934.
¶36 I find no basis in the above for the conclusion that the Herald court in any way established a “signpost for determining the minimum age for negligence liability under Utah‘s common law.” Supra ¶ 16. Its only “signpost” was the proposition that a child is held to a standard “‘graduated to its age, capacity, and experience,‘” to be “measured by what might ordinarily be expected from a child of like age, capacity, and experience under similar conditions.” Herald, 190 P. at 933-34 (citation omitted). And its holding that the child plaintiff in that case was not negligent “as a matter of law” was based on the court‘s analysis of the facts of that case, not an assessment of the cognitive capacity of four-year-olds in general.
¶37 In all events the Herald case is almost a century old. Even if it could be read to establish a hard age cutoff on the basis of the court‘s understanding of cognitive psychology, that question would surely be ripe for reconsideration in light of advances in our understanding in this field in recent decades.
B
¶38 As the majority indicates, the Restatement (Third) of Torts concludes that “[a] child less than five years of age is incapable of negligence.” Supra ¶ 17 (quoting RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 10(b) (AM. LAW INST. 2010)). And a “majority of states” has embraced an age cutoff along these lines. Id. Some set
¶39 In my view, however, the number of these decisions far exceeds the depth of their analysis. The widespread notion of a young child‘s incapacity for negligence is rooted more in judicial tradition than cognitive science. Many courts have alluded to what they see as “common knowledge of the mental development of . . . children.”2 They view the cognitive capacity of a child as a matter of judicial notice, asserting (without citation to expert authority or literature) that children under the age of five (or sometimes seven) have not “developed the mental capacity for foreseeing the possibilities of their inadvertent conduct which would rationally support a finding” of negligence.3
¶40 Occasionally our judges have cloaked these conclusions in the legal-sounding garb of Latin phrases—deeming young children “non sui juris” (not their own master),4 or described by the maxim “quaedam personœ sui juris sunt, quaedam olicuo juri subjectœ” (some
¶41 Still, courts have long resisted challenges to the judicial prerogative of fixing a lower bound on a child‘s capacity for negligence. Some acknowledge “the arbitrary nature” of a hard cutoff at age five or seven, yet fall back on the notion that such cutoff “has been the law” for many decades.6 Another went so far as to “agree . . . that the arbitrariness of the rule supports its abandonment,” while “reluctantly conclud[ing] that the principle of stare decisis require[d] th[e] court” to retain it. Appelhans v. McFall, 757 N.E.2d 987, 991 (Ill. Ct. App. 2001).
¶42 To their credit, some courts have looked to the cognitive psychology literature in fixing an age cutoff for negligence. To the extent they have done so, they have relied principally on the research and publications of psychologist Jean Piaget.7 Piaget grouped children into four rigid developmental categories; he placed children under seven in a category of children deemed “incapable of understanding the physical world” and “unable to foresee the consequences of action.”8 Piaget‘s analysis was respected in its day.9
¶43 For these reasons I would not base a decision in this case on existing caselaw. However widely accepted, the notion of a hard age cutoff at age five finds no reasoned basis in the caselaw. I would therefore take a fresh look at the question of a child‘s cognitive capacity for negligence by examining the relevant literature in the field of cognitive psychology.
II
¶44 The majority seeks to root its age cutoff in assertions about cognitive psychology. It claims that “[c]hildren under the age of five have a limited capacity to appreciate how their actions can cause harm to themselves or others and have an inadequate internal ability to control impulses that may lead to injuries.” Supra ¶ 18. And it insists that “[a]bsent an adequate ability to foresee consequences or control their behavior, ‘the possibility is slight that the conduct of a child under five is either deserving of moral criticism or is capable of being deterred by the application of tort rules.‘” Id. (quoting RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 10 cmt. d (assuming, without citing support in social science literature, that “by the time children reach the age of five, moral rules are becoming internalized, rather than being controlled by external sources“)).11
¶46 In recent decades cognitive psychologists have repudiated the notion that children become capable of the kind of thinking necessary to sustain a finding of negligence only at the age of five. Experts in this field have come to understand that “children vary widely in their mental development and do not move magically from one developmental stage to another simply because they have celebrated a birthday.”12 Importantly, cognitive psychologists have identified an age younger than five at which some young children begin to acquire the mental attributes necessary to be held morally culpable and to be deterred from such behavior. They generally agree that some children acquire those attributes as early as age three.13 And they have identified factors that affect the rate of development of such attributes in individual children—such as the physical development of the brain and the social environment that shapes cognitive human responses.14
¶47 To merit attribution of fault, children must be able to foresee the consequences of their actions and avoid them by controlling their impulses. This involves the ability to plan—to “understand and anticipate the causal connection between actions and outcomes.”15 In order to plan, children “must (1) have the ability to understand cause and effect relationships in the physical world;
¶48 Core executive functions, including working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility, are key components in brain development during preschool years.18 “Executive functions . . . make possible [skills such as] mentally playing with ideas; taking the time to think before acting; meeting novel, unanticipated challenges; resisting temptations; and staying focused.”19 Individual components of executive function emerge before the age of three.20 Primitive signs of working memory and inhibition can be observed in infancy, and experts have identified substantial variability in the development of this attribute among young children.21 From age three and on, children typically undergo the most significant period of executive function development.22
¶49 Of particular relevance to a child‘s capability for negligence is the development of inhibition: “[I]nhibition is a necessary precursor to the forward-planning, self-regulating, goal-
¶50 A child aged three or four may well possess sufficient capacity for executive functions like planning and inhibition to be held responsible for at least some kinds of basic life activities. And for me that is a sufficient ground for rejecting the five-year cutoff advanced by the majority. Our tort law, after all, is not just aimed at protecting the interests of defendants; it must also account for the interest of providing compensation to injured plaintiffs.
¶51 With the above in mind, I would adopt a tiered framework for assessing the negligence of children: (a) children under the age of three would be categorically immune from a finding of negligence; (b) children between the ages of three and seven would be subject to a presumption of incapacity for negligence—a presumption that could be rebutted by expert testimony establishing the individual child‘s capacity for the kind of executive functions (planning and inhibition) necessary to hold them responsible for the actions in question; and (c) children aged eight or older would be held to a standard of a reasonable child of like age, capacity, and experience under similar conditions. This framework seems to me to follow from the premises of cognitive psychology outlined above.
¶53 That act was a fairly simple one. At least some four-year olds seem capable of anticipating the consequence of the basic act of throwing something at another person, and of controlling their impulse to do so. In any event I would leave such questions for case-by-case disposition by the court on the basis of expert testimony instead of foreclosing the possibility as a matter of law.
¶54 I acknowledge the complication introduced by the likely gap between the date of the tort and the time when the child‘s cognitive capacity is assessed by the court. See supra ¶ 18. But the majority overstates the problem. Under my framework the child‘s capacity would not be judged on the basis of trial testimony from the child as to “her individual understanding of cause and effect, foreseeability, and capacity for impulse control.” Id. It would be judged on the basis of expert testimony. And that testimony could often be judged as a matter of law on pretrial motions.
¶55 Expert analysis of a child‘s capacity for negligence would be complicated by the noted time gap between the tort and the decision by the trial judge. But the complication is hardly intractable. A cognitive psychologist could inquire into the child‘s history and experience and offer an opinion on the child‘s likely ability to engage in the sort of planning and inhibition necessary to be responsible at the time of the activity in question. And ultimately the presumption would go against allowing a suit to go forward. So if the time problem identified by the majority becomes too difficult, it will count against a determination of a child party‘s capacity for negligence.
¶56 The timing problem, moreover, is hardly evaded by the majority‘s approach. The problem remains for the children aged five or older left open to a finding of negligence by the court. So the question presented in this case should not be resolved on the basis of the timing problem identified by the majority. It must be resolved by our careful assessment of the age below which most all children are
¶57 The answer to that question is a difficult one. Our current understanding of cognitive psychology suggests that the answer is age three. It also indicates that many children between the age of three and seven are similarly incapable. I would adopt a legal framework that reflects this understanding.
III
¶58 Few young children are likely to engage in the kind of risky activity that will often result in significant harm to others. And when they do, many would-be claimants are likely to cut them some slack for one reason or another—in recognition, for example, of their minimal capacity for culpability, or their limited resources (absent insurance) for payment of damages. In the rare case when a young child is brought to bar, however, our law should reflect the current understanding of cognitive psychology. The framework that I propose would accomplish that objective.
¶59 It would not, however, open any floodgates for child tort litigation. My framework would impose a presumption that sweeps more broadly than the majority‘s age cutoff. It would hold children aged three through seven presumptively incapable of negligence, subject to rebuttal by expert testimony.
¶60 For many children and many activities, this presumption would be difficult to rebut. But at least some young children are likely to be shown capable of understanding the likely consequences of the kind of basic activity at issue in this case—of throwing a toy at another person‘s face—and of controlling their impulses in such acts. I would not foreclose the possibility of such a determination as a matter of law.
¶61 I dissent from the majority‘s adoption of a cutoff at age five because I find no basis for it in the caselaw or in the relevant field of science. I also find the majority‘s focus short-sighted. Its analysis of the relevant policy considerations is focused exclusively on the question of a defendant‘s capacity for moral missteps. Yet tort suits are a two-way street. They are aimed not only at deterrence of unreasonable conduct but also at compensation for the injuries that are caused thereby. I would also consider the claimant‘s interest in compensation before we decide to cut off an entire category of claims. And because at least some children between the ages of three and seven are capable of planning and impulse control, I would
¶62 The majority‘s decision is also short-sighted in a second respect: It ignores the effect of its decision in cases initiated by child plaintiffs. If young children are mentally or morally incapable of negligence, they will not only be immune from suit as defendants; they will also be deemed incapable of fault when they initiate suit as plaintiffs.27 That prospect raises the stakes for our decision today. I suspect that more children file suit as plaintiffs than are named in suits as defendants. If so, the predominant effect of today‘s decision will not be to restrict liability in suits involving children but to expand it. If no young plaintiff will ever have any fault attributed to him in a negligence suit, the defendant in such a suit will be left with full responsibility in every case no matter how minimal his degree of actual relative fault.
¶63 Consider a (presumably common) case involving a child pedestrian plaintiff and a somewhat older driver defendant. The driver defendant will be deemed 100 percent at fault in 100 percent of the cases—even if the defendant is barely negligent and the plaintiff is borderline reckless. So a driver who exceeds the speed limit by one mile per-hour will be 100 percent at fault even in a case filed by a plaintiff who recklessly darted into the roadway in full view of an oncoming car.28 So long as the plaintiff is under the age of five, he can never have any fault attributed to him under the standard adopted today.
¶65 I find these prospects troubling. And I see no legal or scientific basis for adopting the age five cutoff that will lead us down this path. I respectfully dissent.
