290 N.W. 629 | Wis. | 1940
Action by Peter B. Schulte, administrator of the estate of Robert Thomas Schulte, deceased, against the Willow River Power Company. From an order entered August 15, 1939, overruling a demurrer to the complaint on the ground of insufficiency of facts, the defendant appeals. The facts are stated in the opinion. The trial court overruled a demurrer to the complaint for insufficiency of facts. The action is to recover for the death of a sixteen-year-old boy who was electrocuted by coming in contact with defendant's high-tension wire. It appears from the complaint that the wire was strung from a crossbar attached directly to a crossbeam connecting the apexes of opposite trusses of a steel bridge across the St. Croix river at Hudson. The bridge was so constructed that boys could and did climb to the apex of the truss. The deceased so climbed and came in contact with defendant's wire in some unstated manner.
It is alleged that children to the knowledge of the Power Company habitually played in the vicinity and habitually climbed upon the bridge; that the bridge was constructed with latticework braces which induced climbing by children, and by this construction the deceased was induced to climb to the place of his injury when he came in contact with the wire; that the company failed to have any barrier about its wire and negligently maintained its wire near to the latticework braces, and failed to maintain any sign warning of danger therefrom. *190
These facts do not state a cause of action unless under the doctrine of the attractive-nuisance or turntable cases. This doctrine, speaking broadly, is that liability is imposed upon those maintaining inherently dangerous structures or instrumentalities for injuries sustained by children of tender years, who to the knowledge of those maintaining them, are injured while playing on or about them. But assuming, but not deciding, that that doctrine would apply to a child of such years under the facts above stated, it does not apply to a normal boy sixteen years old.
"It is a general rule that a trespasser takes his chances and must look out for himself; and that no duty rests upon the owner to keep his property in such condition or so guarded that a wrongful intermeddler shall not be exposed to danger. But . . . while a proprietor may owe no duty to adults with respect to instrumentalities maintained by him, he may be liable for injuries to a child of tender years for injuries sustained from the same instrumentalities. . . ." 20 R.C.L. p. 79, § 70.
The idea last above stated is expressed in 45 C.J. p. 763, 161, as follows:
"The attractive-nuisance doctrine applies only to property, conditions, appliances, or instrumentalities which are per se of a dangerous character with respect to children of tenderage, or are of such character that children of tender age can create danger to themselves out of them, so that they are likely to or probably will result in injury to children who are attracted to them. . . ."
It is to be noted that the doctrine rests upon the idea that children "of tender years" are entitled to the protection of the rule. In Vannatta v. Lancaster Light Power Co.
A section of an exhaustive note in 36 A.L.R. on "Attractive Nuisances," at page 141, is devoted to the "Age limit for application of doctrine." Belt R. Co. v. Charters
(1905),
This court has in a variety of situations imposed liability for injuries caused to or by children while playing about dangerous structures or instrumentalities. Busse v. Rogers,
We hold, upon reason as well as upon the authority of the adjudicated cases, that the doctrine of attractive nuisances does not apply to young people of ordinary intelligence the age of sixteen years. There is no allegation in the complaint that the deceased was not of ordinary intelligence, and we cannot assume that he was not. It follows that the trial court was in error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the record is remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint. *193