This is an action of tort for personal injuries. We are to take it that the plaintiff, a boy, was a trespasser with some other boys in the kitchen attached to the defendant’s restaurant, and that the defendant spilled water upon the stove for the purpose of frightening the boys away. He did not intend to scald them, but the water flew from the stove upon the legs of the boys. The question raised by the exceptions is whether the jury were warranted in finding the defendant liable.
It will be seen that this case falls between the cases of spring guns and the like, where the defendant is or may be in the same position as if he had been personally present and. had shot the plaintiff, and the cases where, as against trespassers or licensees, railroads are held entitled to run trains in their usual way without special precautions. Chenery v. Fitchburg Railroad,
Just as a man may make himself liable to a negligent plaintiff by a later negligence, (Pierce v. Cunard Steamship Co.
Exceptions overruled.
