72 Pa. 169 | Pa. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
— The only question raised by these assignments of error, which, it is deemed necessary to discuss is, whether under the' evidence, the plaintiffs below — the parents of the child who was run over and killed by the railroad ear of the defendants— were guilty of culpable negligence in permitting him to run abroad in the street without a competent protector. It was undoubtedly settled very properly in Glassey v. Hestonville Passenger Railway Co., 7 P. F. Smith 172, that if the parents permit a child of tender years to run at large without a protector in a city traversed constantly by cars and other vehicles, they fail in the performance of their duties, and are guilty of such negligence as precludes them from a recovery of damages for any injury resulting therefrom. If the case is barely such, the negligence is á conclusion of law, and ought not to be submitted to the determination of the jury. But in this case there was evidence that the child was not per
Judgment affirmed.