180 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1923
The following opinion was filed January 9, 1923:
The question presented here is: Does the evidence sustain the finding of the jury to the effect that the defendant Joseph Look knew, before Stephen Routt was injured, that he was riding on the side of the truck in a perilous position? There is an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony given by the little boys and that given by Joseph Look, the driver of the truck, at the time the injury occurred. The jury having found in favor of the plaintiff, we accept as true the testimony given by the ‘boys and limit. our consideration of the case to the question of whether or not it sustains the verdict.
Joseph Gallowitz, at the time of the accident nine years of age and at the time of the trial eleven j^ears of age, testified that four of the boys yere playing together in the allej'’ and saw the truck being loaded.
“I helped with two boards and threw them on the truck. Then I asked the man if I could have a ride and he said I may have one and I went in and Johnny Routt and my brother they saw me go into the truck and they were sitting-on the running-board. I was sitting by the driver in the seat. The other little boys did not help throw any boards on the truck. I didn’t see Samuel Look there. There were two men loading up the boards.”
It seems to be undisputed, however, except for the testimony of this boy, that Samuel Look and his employee did load the truck; that it remained in the place where it was
“When he [Look] began to go, he did not look around. I didn’t see him look around at any time after he started up or before he started up. I know he saw these little boys on the side of the truck because he bended over. I was sitting here-and he put his head over and he looked in back of the truck on the left side of the truck and then he went about twenty or thirty feet. There was a basket in the alley ahead of the truck. He told Johnny Routt should take it away. It was in the middle of the alley. Johnny Routt went ahead and took the basket away and put it on the side. Then Steve he noticed we were in the truck, then he came running, and he was hanging on a board; then he was riding; after the basket was in the way, he was pretty near out of the alley and when his leg was caught in the chain and his leg was run over and my brother saw it and began to holler to the driver he should stop and then he stopped. When the truck stopped Steve was about two feet from the truck. I don’t know whether the wheels went over his leg. The boards were so high I could not look out. The other little boys were sitting on the running-board. I had ridden with the driver about twenty-five or thirty feet. He drove kind of slow. We were playing right around near the truck. Nothing was said we should get away from the truck. When I asked him for a ride, he said all right, and then I went in.”
John Gallowitz, brother of Joseph, at the time of the accident seven years of age and at the time of the trial nine, testified:
“My brother first of all he loaded two or three boards; then he asked the driver for a ride and the driver said he could have a ride. My brother then went in and he was sitting with him in the seat. First he asked him, I heard that, then Johnny Routt and I walked a little away by the post. We were standing by the post. Little Steve he was not far from us. Then while I was standing all at*6 once as the truck went I saw my brother in the seat where the driver was and I saw there was room on the fender and I jumped on the fender and Johnny Routt, there was space and he jumped on the fender too. Steve sees there was no room on the fender and he jumped on a board and as the truck went it was kind of shivery and his clothes got caught into the wheel. The driver looked back to see if the boards were not falling. He told Johnny Routt to take the basket out of the way. Little Steve got under the wheel. As soon as I hollered he should stop, then he looked up and saw him; there was an open space where a little window was supposed to be, and no glass in there, he stuck his head out and saw little Steve under, the wheel. Steve’s clothes got caught into the wheel and that pulled him down. I know he saw me on the fender because he turned as he bent over my brother to look out, he saw little Steve; he only wanted to look at the boards, and he saw little Steve, and didn’t say anything to him, turned sideways, and he saw us on the fender. Steve grabbed onto a piece of lumber on the same side — we were on the left side — he was on the left side and we were on the left-hand side. Where Steve got on was further away in the back of the truck than where we got on.” <
John Routt, a brother of the plaintiff, at the time of the accident seven years of age, testified:
“We saw the men loading the truck and then Joe helped the men put two or three boards on the truck and then he asked the man for a ride. The man said yes he could have a ride and he got on the truck. We were by the telephone post, about twenty or twenty-five feet- away from the truck. Joe asked for a ride and as soon as he started the truck on, then Johnny said, ‘Let’s jump on the running-board,’ and then I say ‘yes’ and then me and Johnny went and sat on the running-board. Little Sieve followed us right away after that. .There was not room enough by the running-board and then we told him to get in the middle, but he didn’t want tO', so he hanged on one of the boards. I didn’t see the driver. The driver looked back. He didn’t see Steve. He looked back on the lumbers, but he saw some of Steve’s head, but didn’t see much, he saw just a little space*7 because he could'not see him, the lumber was too high. He saw Johnny Gallowitz and me sitting on the running-board. There was a basket in front of the truck and he said one of us boys should go to it and take the basket away and I jumped off and took the basket away and went by telephone post and as soon as he start on, I start and jump on the truck, and then Steve could not hold so tight, and he slipped off, and he got caught, clothes got caught in the chain. Then I didn’t see Steve hanging on the board, and as soon as the auto started up, then Steve started hollering and I looked right away, and I seen Steve laying down next to the wheel.”
The testimony of Joseph Look, the driver, is that the boy was injured while on the right side of the truck. The boys, however, testify that it was on the left side. The testimony of these children is, ás one would expect it to be, somewhat contradictory and inconsistent. It was a moment of considerable excitement, and every effort should be made to reconcile and give effect to their testimony. The testi-mqny of Joseph Gallowitz to the effect that the driver bent over him and looked out would seem to indicate that the boys were on the right side of the truck. If they were not, then the testimony of Joseph Gallowitz to the effect that the driver saw them by bending over and looking out on the right side can be of no effect. The testimony of the other boys is quite clear to- the effect, although they say the driver saw Stephen, that it would have been impossible for him to have done so under the conditions they describe. Under such circumstances their testimony to the effect that he saw Stephen can be given very little if any weight. Taking the testimony of the boys together, it appears quite clearly that Joseph Gallowitz, by permission, was riding on the seat with the driver. The truck being a converted Ford was a left-hand drive. At the time the truck started, Stephen, John Routt, and John Gallowitz were standing some twenty or thirty feet away; that as the truck proceeded they got onto the running-board or fender where they were seen by the
We can find no testimony in the case which supports a finding that the driver ever knew that Stephen was in this perilous position. The most that can be said is that he knew of the three boys who were standing by the telephone pole; two were riding oh the fender in a place of comparative safety. While there are statements made by the boys to the effect that the driver saw Stephen, their testimony considered as a whole shows that he could not have seen him under the circumstances.
The legal principles applicable here are frequently invoked in cases where boys attempt to catch onto and ride moving trains. Whether or not the older boys were trespassers is a question which need not be determined. The use of the word “trespassers” in this connection has be.en severely criticised. However, it is used not to impute to-children any wrongful purpose of wrongful intent nor to charge them with any legal or moral delinquency, but simply to describe their legal relation to the owners of the property upon which they go without permission. In this case the boys were at a place where they had no right to be, and except for- their tender years the duty which the driver of the truck owed to them would be that owing to a trespasser. It has long been the established law of this state that a person owes no duty to a trespasser except that of refraining from wilful and intentional injury. Klix v. Nieman, 68 Wis. 271, 32 N. W. 223 ; Schug v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 102 Wis. 515, 78 N. W. 1090; Bonniwell v. Milwaukee L., H. & T. Co. 174 Wis. 1, 182 N. W. 468.
To this rule there is one very notable exception and that is where a person leaves an instrumentality or premises
The testimony shows quite clearly that John Routt and John Gallowitz were not invited to ride. The testimony is very indefinite, but there is nothing to indicate that they were in a perilous position or. that as to them the driver in any way failed in the performance of his legal duty. The alley over which the truck was passing had recently been paved. It was level, smooth, and the boys testified that the driver drove very slowly. In one place they describe themselves as sitting on the fender, in another place they seem to indicate that they jumped upon the fender. Whatever their true situation was, it does not appear to have been perilous.
The plaintiff was at the time of the accident three and one-half years of age. There is no evidence as to his phjrsical or mental development and we must assume, therefore, that he was the average normal child. From the fact that he was able to grab onto the side of the moving truck and hang on for some distance at least indicates that he was physically active and possessed of considerable strength considering his years. Under these circumstances, can it be said that the driver of the truck was chargeable with knowledge that Stephen was on or about the truck and owed him the duty of stopping the truck to make an inspection to discover what the fact was ? We find no evidence whatever to sustain the finding of the jury that the driver was guilty of any intentional or wilful act of misconduct toward Stephen, nor do we find any credible evidence to the effect that the
The question then remains, Was he chargeable with such knowledge as a matter of law under all the facts and circumstances ? It is contended that this case falls within the rule laid down in Kelly v. Southern Wis. R. Co. 152 Wis. 328, 140 N. W. 60. In that-case a street railway company was engaged in stringing wires in a public street and part of their equipment consisted of a snatch block pulley. While a boy six years of age was amusing himself with a rope near the snatch block, the team was started and his hand was drawn into the pulley and severely injured. It was held that one who maintains, in a place where children of tender years have a right to be, an object or condition which he knows or ought to know is likely to attract them to interfere therewith to their peril, owes a duty to prevent injury to such children. In that case it is to be noted that the child was in the street, at a place where it had a right to be, and it was expressly held that under the circumstances of that case he was not a trespasser although he was playing with the rope which was attached to the block and defendant’s employees knew of his presence.
Unless it is to be held that the driver of a truck proceeding along the public way is bound when he passes children to stop his truck and inspect it to discover whether or not any of them have attempted to mount it, we see no grounds upon which the defendants may be held liable for the benefit of the plaintiff. While the question has never been before this court, it has been held in other states that he is not required to look out for children who may attempt» to climb onto the sides or the rear of his vehicle. Hebard v. Mdbie, 98 Ill. App. 543; Smith v. Peter Schoenhofen B. Co. 201 Ill. App. 552; Gamble v. Uncle Sam Oil Co. 100 Kan. 74, 163 Pac. 627; Huddy, Automobiles (6th ed.) sec. 420.
“It is a care of serious moment imposed upon the busy-teamster to make a search around his car. lest a child too young for discretion and undirected by parents has tucked herself away in an obscure place beyond the casual and convenient notice of the driver. The drivey, by such rule, in responsibility supersedes guardians and other custodians in watchfulness of the children on each block where his business requires him to stop. An automobile is a legitimate vehicle on the street, and entitled to stop without accumulating children upon it. I am not convinced that it is the usual duty of a chauffeur to search for infantile trespassers ensconced on the far side of his car.”
In Gamble v. Uncle Sam Oil Co., supra, it is said:
“The attractive-nuisance doctrine cannot be extended to include motor trucks, nor made applicable to cases like this one. Motor trucks are in common use, and no more attractive nuisances than are drays and other ordinary vehicles used for carrying persons and goods along the streets and highways.”
It is argued, however, that, because the two older boys were upon the truck, the driver is by reason of that fact chargeable with notice that the other boy was upon or at least might be upon the truck. We do not consider this argument tenable. It requires the driver to assume that, because two boys seven years of age had without invitation climbed onto the side of the truck in a place of comparative safety, the third boy, three and one-half years of age, had grabbed onto the side of the truck and was maintaining himself in a position of great peril. We are of the opinion that the driver is required to make no such assumption; that in cases where the attractive-nuisance theory is not applicable, the duty of a driver, to look out for the safety of a child does not arise unless and until he is advised or knows or ought to know that the child is in a perilous situation.
A child of that age could not very well be upon the outside part of a truck anywhere and not be in a perilous position, but the driver is not required to assume that a child of such years will climb upon the truck, nor is he bound to stop his truck where he passes a group of children and inspect the truck to see whether or not a child has attempted to climb upon the truck.
There is nothing here to show a custom by virtue of which children were permitted to ride upon this truck and that such custom was known to the boys playing in the vicinity of the loaded truck,' so that the case is not within the rule laid down in Madden v. S. L. Mitchell A. Co. 21 Ga. App, 108, 94 S. E. 92.
This case must also be distinguished from cases where children have clustered about a truck which has stopped in a street. It is conceded here that at the time the driver started the truck all of the children were in a place of safety, one on the seat beside him and three standing near the telephone post some twenty or thirty feet away. Ziehm v. Vale, 98 Ohio St. 306, 120 N. E. 702, 1 A. L. R. 1381.
It has been held that one inviting another to ride gratuitously in his automobile is not, in the absence of gross negligence, liable for injury to him by the overturning of the car by the chauffeur. Massaletti v. Fitzroy, 228 Mass. 487, 118 N. E. 168, L. R. A. 1918C, 264.
The question has been discussed but not decided by this court. O’Shea v. Lavoy, 175 Wis. 456, 185 N. W. 525.
Under the testimony given by the boys it is very difficult to ascertain upon which side of the car the plaintiff was at
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on March 6,_ 1923.