108 Va. 324 | Va. | 1908
delivered the opinion, of the court.
This action was brought by defendant in error to recover damages of the plaintiff in error, the defendant in the court below, for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon the plaintiff by reason of the negligence of the defendant.
The accident out of which the action arose, as disclosed by the evidence certified in the record, viewed under the rule governing its consideration in this court, occurred under the following circumstances: The defendant operates electric ears in the city of Norfolk, upon two parallel tracks, laid in Church street which runs approximately north and south; the cars going in a southerly direction passing along and over the western track, and the cars going in the other direction passing over the eastern track, this accident happening a short distance north of the intersection of Church street and Charlotte street, which last-named street runs approximately east and west. The wheel of the car which inflicted the injury to plaintiff was the front wheel of the front truck of an Ocean View car, going south on Church street, and following a city car going in the same direction, making a number of stops at the intersecting streets, and causing the Ocean View car, which did not do city business, to proceed at a slow rate of speed. The city car had stopped just north of Charlotte street at the time that the Ocean View car had reached a point about thirty feet north of the place at which it and all cars operating on Church street were required to stop before crossing Charlotte street, and when the Ocean View car reached that point and was slowing down to make the stop required at Charlotte street, it was met and passed by a wagon which was going north along and upon the eastern track of the defendant laid in Church street. Just as the rear end of this wagon passed the front platform of the Ocean View car, the motorman, who was looking forward, saw to his right and to the rear of his front vision an object dart in from behind the wagon and towards his ear; whereupon, he
The plaintiff, a boy “just a little over eleven years” of age, was taking a ride on the rear end of a wagon passing along Church street in an opposite direction to that in which the car was going, and his statement is that he jumped off the rear of the wagon and started to go diagonally across Church street toward the track on which this Ocean View car was proceeding in a southerly direction, his objective point being a ball game on a vacant lot on Charlotte street; and that he had not had time to start into a run, and is not sure that he ever got on the track on which the car was proceeding before he came in contact with the car and fell.
The plaintiff had lived all his life in the city of Norfolk, with a double-track car line in front of his home, on which cars were constantly passing in both directions. He had been accustomed to play out in the street for several years. He knew that there was a double-track line of cars on Church street. He had been accustomed to play around the streets, steal rides on the back of wagons, probably having done so, as he says, a hundred times. He had been going to school for about three years, and at the time of this accident was advanced in his studies as far as the “Fourth Reader.” He was a boy of enough intelligence to understand that street cars were dangerous and to be avoided, and of enough intelligence to be sent by his mother on errands to stores around in the city; and, on the day of the accident to him, he had been sent by his mother on an errand to a certain store in the city, and had gone several blocks out of his way in order to take a ride on the back of a wagon passing along Church street, and to go by and see a ball game before attending to the errand on which he was sent.
There is nothing in the evidence tending to sustain the judgment of the lower court, on the ground that the car was running at an unlawful rate of speed at the time of the accident, or the failure of the defendant’s servants in charge of the car to give the proper signals; the uncontradicted proof being, that the motorman stopped his car just after the front wheel passed over plaintiff’s foot, and before the rear wheel of the front truck reached the point of the accident, and that if no accident had happened the car would have stopped thirty feet from the place of the accident, this being the regular stop for all cars, thus
Upon the foregoing state of facts, which the evidence tended to prove, the first question for the determination of the jury, under proper instructions from the court as to the law applicable to these facts, was, whether or not the defendant had been guilty of negligence causing the injury to the plaintiff? In other words, whether or not the servants of the defendant operating the car which inflicted the injury saw, or could, by the exercise of reasonable care, have seen the plaintiff approaching the railway track or car,' with intent to cross the track in front of the car, in time to have avoided injuring him ?
This question was submitted to the jury by an instruction asked for by the plaintiff, with this addition: “But the jury are further instructed that the law presumes that an infant between seven and fourteen years of age cannot be guilty of contributory negligence, which presumption may be overcome by evidence that the infant has more than the average capacity of children of his age; and in this case this presumption must be overcome by evidence establishing the intelligence, maturity and capacity of the plaintiff before contributory negligence on ' his part can be relied on as a defense.”
Exception was taken to this instruction, directed specifically to that portion of it defining the law as to the contributory negligence of infants.
We are of opinion that the instruction is open to the objection made to it. The language of the instruction has not, as counsel for the plaintiff claim, been “adopted by this court.” Undoubtedly the question of capacity was a question for the jury, but it was to be determined under proper and correct instructions, leaving it to the jury for determination from the evidence before them.
The instruction is very different, not only in language but in substance, from the instruction approved in Roanoke v. Shull,
In Trumbo v City St. Car Co., 89 Va. 780, 17 S. E. 124, the opinion says, that the question, whether or not a child between seven and fourteen years of age is sui juris — i. e., of capacity to exercise care as to its personal safety — is a question of fact to be determined by the jury upon the particular facts of each case, unless the child be of such very tender years as that its incapacity to exercise any degree of care as to its personal safety can be declared as a matter of law.
In the case before us, the instruction under consideration undertook to determine the standard by which the capacity of the plaintiff was to be fixed, and made his standard the “average capacity of children of his age.” While age is, of course, a circumstance to be considered in determining the capacity of a child between seven and fourteen years of age, it is by no means the sole criterion; but that question, as all the authorities agree, should be left to the jury, to be determined by the
The declaration in the case contains four counts, in each of which it is charged, that “the cars of the said defendant company then and there ran and struck with great force and violence upon and against the said plaintiff, whereby he was greatly bruised, hurt, maimed, mangled”; and the defendant sought to have the jury told that the plaintiff was required to prove his case as laid in the declaration, and that an averment in the declaration that the plaintiff was injured in a particular way could not be supported by proof that he was injured in an entirely different manner; and, therefore, that if the jury believed that the accident happened in the manner in which the evidence tended to show, by the plaintiff himself running or walking into the side of the car, there could be no recovery upon the allegations in the declaration. But the court, on objection being made by the plaintiff to the instruction as asked, modified it so as to read as follows:
“The court instructs the jury, that if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, instead of being run into and struck by the car, as charged in the declaration, himself ran or walked into the side of the car, and was injured without the fault of the motorman, or if you believe from the evidence that it is just as probable that the accident happened in this way, and without the fault of the motorman, as in the way charged in the declaration, your verdict should be for the defendant.” This instruction, as offered, also told the jury, rightly, that if the defendant was guilty of no negligence, then there could
There is nothing whatever 'in the evidence which tended to prove a state of facts involving the question of the last clear ■chance, but simply the questions: (1) Was the defendant guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff; and (2) if the defendant was guilty of such negligence, did the plaintiff contribute to his own injury; and in determining this last question it was proper for the jury to be plainly instructed, that the plaintiff being an infant under the .age of fourteen, but over seven years of age, was to be presumed incapable of contributory negligence, but this presumption might be overcome by the evidence and circumstances of the case tending to prove his maturity and capacity.
In this view of the ease, the judgment of the lower court has to be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Therefore, other questions raised and discussed need not he considered ; and if, upon another trial the evidence he practically the same as at the last, the jury should he instructed as indicated in this opinion.
The judgment of the circuit court will he reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.