70 Vt. 509 | Vt. | 1898
This is an action to recover, “such damages as are just with reference to the pecuniary injuries resulting from the death of Frank Ploof, a boy ten years of age, to Louis Ploof, his father, the plaintiff administrator, and to his wife, the mother of Frank Ploof, the father and mother being the next of kin of Frank Ploof. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant. The defendant, on September 4, 1896, owned and operated an electric railway in the city of Burlington. On that day one of its cars ran over the intestate, Frank Ploof, and inflicted upon him such injuries that he died in a few hours. At that time the intestate was a boy ten years of age, healthy and of ordinary ability. He attended the public schools, could read and write, and for about a year had sold evening papers on the street. He had gone about the city and on the streets on which the electric cars ran, for the purpose of attending school and for the purpose of selling papers. On the day when he was injured, he had, with the consent of his parents, attended the annual fair at Howard Park, about half a mile distant from the place of the accident, and was returning for the purpose of procuring and selling the evening papers. His parents were not present at the place of the accident when it occurred, and resided some distance from it. The defendant claimed that the parents of the deceased were negligent in permitting him to go into the streets where the cars were, and, at the defendant’s request, against the exception of the plaintiff, the court charged:
The plaintiff took several other exceptions to the charge but now insists upon this one alone. He insists that this exception should be sustained, first, because he contends that the recovery is in the right of the intestate, and that under the decisions of this court the negligence of the parents contributing to the accident which injures their minor child cannot be imputed to the minor child in an action brought by the child against a third person to recover personal damages sustained through the concurring negligence of such third person. Assuming, but not conceding, that this is such an action, or one in which the administrator is seeking to recover damages sustained by the intestate, and for the benefit of the estate of the intestate, his contention is supported by Robinson v. Cone, 22 Vt. 213: 54 Am. Dec. 67 and note. That case has become a leading case against the doctrine of imputed negligence, and its doctrine is quite generally followed by courts of last resort, and endorsed by eminent legal writers. The doctrine of imputed negligence was announced in the earlier decision of Hartfield v. Roper, 21 Wendell 614, which has been followed to some extent by courts of last resort. Some such courts, which early adopted the doctrine on the strength of Hartfield v. Roper, have receded, and now hold the doctrine of Robinson v. Cone. Much has been written for and against the doctrine of imputed negligence. It is very fully and carefully collated, and clearly set forth in the brief for the defendant. We shall take no time in reviewing the decisions on the subject. In a suit in which a minor or
Secondly, the plaintiff contends that when the recovery as in this case, is for the benefit of the parents, the contributory negligence of such parents, is no defence. Put briefly, this contention is that a parent may recover damages sustained in part by his own wrong, or damages produced by an accident to which his own negligence contributed. This contention is against the recent decision of this court in Lindsay, admr. v. Railroad Co., 68 Vt. 556, and against the general doctrine that a party whose negligence has contributed to the happening of the accident causing him damages cannot recover, because he cannot recover for so much of such damages as he, himself caused, and because the law will not, if it were possible fairly and justly so to do, trouble itself to inquire into and divide such damages
Nor does the statute give the representative of the wife and next of kin an absolute right of recovery. Their right to damages determines their right to recover. The language of the statute is, “The court and jury may give such damages as are just with references,” etc. From a very early day the common law has denied a recovery, as unjust, to a party whose negligence has contributed to the accidentcausing the injury for which he demands damages. All statutes conferring a right of recovery of damages, especially when in terms, they give such damages only as are just, must be read and considered with reference to this universal principle of the common law. So read, this statute does not give an absolute right to recover, in case a right of action would have survived to the intestate, if death had not ensued. The plaintiff has brought to our attention some cases where the courts have apparently supported his contention. Wymore v. Mahaska County, 78 Iowa 396: 16 Am. St. R. 449, cited by the plaintiff is against his contention. The statute of Iowa gave a right of recovery to the estate of the minor intestate, and one to the next of kin. The action was to recover for tjie estate. The court held that the contributory negligence of the parents could not be imputed to their minor child, to defeat a recovery for his estate, but say, “Such negligence would prevent a recovery by the parents in their own right.” Consolidated Traction Co. v. Hone, from New Jersey, 35 At. 899, seems to support the contention of the plaintiff. The statute of New Jersey is worded somewhat differently from our statute. The opinion cites — evidently without careful consideration — the Iowa case as supporting the decision. Whether the other cases cited by the plaintiff support his contention we have not been able to determine. The statutes in some of the states from which cases are cited are very different from the one under consideration, and may properly receive different consideration. Some give a definite
Thirdly, the plaintiff contends that there was error in the charge wherein, in substance, the court told the jury, that if the parents were negligent in permitting the boy to go into the street where the car ran, the plaintiff could not recover. He contends with much force, and, so far as disclosed by the exceptions, we think with reason, that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of these parents to be submitted to the jury; that the boy was of such an age, and of such physical and mental characteristics that it was not negligence to permit him to go upon the streets where the cars ran; that the law required them to send him to school over such streets; that they had the right to send him on errands or for pleasure and amusement, unattended upon such streets, where the law compelled them to send him to attend school. The plaintiff did not raise this question by a proper motion or request. Hence we do not consider whether there was any evidence to go to the jury on the question of contributory negligence. By his exception to the charge he has raised the question whether evidence that the parents permitted the intestate to go upon the street, had a tendency to show such proximate negligence, contributing to the accident which caused his death as will defeat a recovery. The most this evidence tended to show was that the parents negligently permitted him to go unattended, upon the street where the car ran, or that their negligence was a factor in bringing him to the place of the accident, but
In Templeton v. Montpelier, there were two highways leading from Montpelier to the place where the plaintiff desired to go. The referee found that the plaintiff was negligent in taking the highway where the accident occurred, but was guilty of no other contributory negligence. This court held that'his negligence was remote, and permitted him to recover. In Davis & Gay v. C. Vt. R. R. Co., the defendant, it was found, owed a duty to the plaintiff to have moved the grain from the elevator before it was destroyed by fire without their negligence being involved in the fire. It was held that defendant’s negligence was the remote cause of the loss of the plaintiff’s grain, and did not entitle them to recover. The negligence in the case of Trow and in the two cases last
It is observable that, in each of the cases, the failure to discharge a duty denominated remote negligence, was not an active factor of the accident, causing damages, but a factor in producing a condition, upon which the proximate or causal negligence of the other party operated.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.