40 Pa. Super. 219 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
This action was brought to recover damages which resulted from the alleged negligence of the defendant’s servant, in recklessly, carelessly and negligently driving the defendant’s team on River street in the borough of Braddock, so as to run over the plaintiff’s child, and causing injuries that resulted in the death of the child shortly thereafter.
There was considerable dispute as to whether it was dark or
The negligence of the defendant must be conceded, if the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses is to be relied upon at all, and the jury accepted their versions. The horse was evidently being driven at a rapid pace along a lighted street, on which children were playing, in disregard of such reasonable care as is exacted by the law. The defendant submitted but a single point, “Under all the evidence the verdict must be for the defendant,” which was refused. The record presents but a single assignment of error, “The court erred in refusing to grant a motion for judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto.”
It is only in clear cases where neither the facts nor the inferences to be drawn from them are in doubt, that the court is warranted in withdrawing the question of negligence from the jury: Kroesen v. New Castle Elec. St. Ry. Co., 198 Pa. 26. The argument of the defendant is directed principally to the action of the court in submitting the question of contributory negligence to the jury. The decisions in this state are harmonious on this subject. Protection is a paternal duty. Entire failure to extend it must be negligence. Generally what is, and
Many cases hold the parents to a very high degree of care in safeguarding their helpless children against manifest danger, but as stated by Judge Rice in Davidson v. Schuylkill Traction Co., 4 Pa. Superior Ct. 86: “ Whether it was a negligent act or not depends upon the circumstances, some of which are in dispute. It is not negligence per se like the failure to stop, look and listen before crossing a railroad track. The case therefore is a proper one for the application of the well-established principle, that when the measure of duty is ordinary and reasonable care, and when the degree of care varies according to the circumstances, the case of negligence is always for the jury. When a parent makes reasonable effort to guard his child from danger, and the child escapes, and without the knowledge of the parent goes into a place of danger, the question of contributory negligence upon the part of the parent is usually for the jury: Lederman v. R. R. Co., 165 Pa. 118; Pitts., Allegheny & Manchester Ry. v. Pearson, 72 Pa. 169. Taking into consideration the facts of this case, the humble home of a laborer without any yard or protected playground, facing a street infrequently used, and on a river bank, the mother exercising her natural as well as her legal duty in having the child in her immediate care, and but for a mere mordent relaxes her physical control of the baby to allow the child to play in her direct view out on an open