*201 OPINION
By the Court,
This appeal is from a verdict and judgment for the defendants in a personal injury action commenced by a mother on behalf of her six-year-old daughter. The main issue is whether a child of that age may possess the capacity to be contributorily negligent. The district court, after questioning the child out of the presence of the jury, determined that the issue of her contributory negligence should be submitted to the jury for resolution under appropriate instruction. The appellants contend that this was reversible error. A subordinate claim of error concerning jury instructions also is pressed. We have concluded that the district court ruled properly throughout and affirm the judgment.
The daytime accident giving rise to this litigation happened when the six-year-old child wаs attempting to cross East Plumb Lane at its intersection with Locust Street in Reno, Nevada. East Plumb Lane is an east-west arterial with four lanes of traffic, two in each direction, plus a left-turn lanе for cars traveling east on Plumb and intending to turn north onto Locust. A narrow island, or median strip, separates the west and east lanes on Plumb. There was a stop sign for those driving south on Locust. There were no other traffic controls at the intersection. The speed limit on Plumb Lane was 30 miles per hour.
The six-year-old child and her eight-year-old playmate, each with parental рermission, had gone to the Mayfair Market, walking north across Plumb to get there. After buying candy they separated, and the six-year-old started home alone. She crossed the westbound lanes оf Plumb to the narrow island or median strip. At that moment the defendant Mitchell’s car *202 was stopped on Plumb, short of the crosswalk, in the left-turn lane, intending to turn north onto Locust. The defendant Mathews was driving east on Plumb within the speed limit in the lane adjoining that occupied by the Mitchell car and “a couple of car lengths” behind. The child, without looking to the right or left, ran in front of the Mitchell car and was struck by the Mathews car which, with brakes applied, could not stop in time. The child was seriously injured. She had crossed that intersection several times before without adult supervision and had bеen instructed at home and school how to safely cross a street. The facts concerning the accident were controverted. We have related those which support thе verdict reached by the jury.
1. The court instructed the jury on the subject of contributory negligence. The degree of care applicable to a six-year-old child was properly stаted.
1
The appellants simply contend that the instruction should not have been given at all since a six-year-old child is incapable of negligence, as a matter of law. This point of view has found the approval of some courts and has been rejected by others. The cases are collected in a series of annotations,
In our opinion it is not advisable to establish a fixed and arbitrary rule, and we reject the view espoused by the Ohio court in Holbrock v. Hamilton Distributing, Inc., supra. We prefer to treat the issue of contributory negligence of a child as a fact issue for the jury upon proper instructions unless reasonable minds could come to but one conclusion from the evidence. This allows for a degree of flexibility in the handling of each case as it comes before the trial court. That court may decide initially whether reasonable minds could believe that the particular child has the capacity to exercise thаt degree of care expected of children of the same age, experience and intelligence in similar circumstances. Should the court determine that the child has such capacity, the jury then is to decide whether such care was exercised in the particular case. Should the court rule otherwise, then, of course, the issue of contributory fault would nоt be submitted for jury resolution. This procedure was followed in the case at hand, and we approve it. The evidence supports the court’s conclusion that the plaintiff-child possеssed the capacity of a normal six-year-old. Indeed, the appellants do not contend otherwise.
2. The trial court instructed the jury about a city traffic ordinance which concerned the right of way of pedestrians in *204 a crosswalk. 2 By a separate instruction the jury was advised that a violation of that ordinance by any of the defendants was negligence as a matter of law.
The plaintiffs-appellants complain of pаragraph (b) of that instruction, and contend that the jury should have been advised that the provision of that paragraph does not apply to a six-year-old child. In another instruction the сourt informed the jury that the standard of care applicable to a child applies “even when the evidence shows a child may have violated an ordinance.” See instructiоn quoted in footnote 1. The court did not, at any time, inform the jury that an ordinance violated by the child was negligence per se. This case is thus set apart from the California decision in Daun v. Truax,
Affirmed.
Notes
The instruction read: “A child is not held to the same standard of conduct as an adult and is only required to exercise that degree of care which ordinarily would be exercised by childrеn of the same age, intelligence and experience. There is no precise age at which, as a matter of law, a child comes to be held accountable for his aсtions by the same standard as applies to an adult. It is for you to determine whether the conduct of Catherine Quillian, was or was not such as might reasonably have been expected from a child of the same age, intelligence and experience under the same or similar circumstances. If you determine that it was, then her conduct was not negligence. If you find that it was nоt, then her conduct was negligence.
“The rule just stated applies even when the evidence shows a child may have violated an ordinance. The question whether or not the child was negligent must still be answered by the above standard as I have stated it to you.”
The instruction: “On August 27, 1966, there was in force in the City of Reno, State of Nevada, an Ordinance, the pertinent parts of which reаd as follows:
“Section 10-122. Pedestrians’ Right of Way in Cross Walks, “(a) When traffic-control signals are in place and in operation, or not in place, or not in operation, the driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way, slowing down or stopping if need be, to so yield to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within a cross walk when the pedestrian is upon the half of the roadway uрon which the vehicle is traveling, or when the pedestrian is approaching so closely from the opposite half of the roadway as to be in danger. “(b) No pedestrian shall suddenly leave a curb or other place of safety and walk or run into the path of a vehicle which is so close that it is impossible for the driver to yield.
“(d) Whenever a vehicle is stopped at a marked cross walk or at any unmarked cross walk at an intersection, to permit a pedestrian to cross the roadway, the driver of any other vehicle approaching from the rear shall not overtake and pass such stopped vehicle.”
