As will be seen by the accompanying plat, the packing houses of the Dold Packing Company at Kansas City are located in what is known as the “West Bottoms” and at the northeast corner of Ninth and Wyoming streets. At the north end of its property the packing company has its engine housе where several boilers and furnaces are had to furnish the power for the machinery. Immediately north of this lies a large tract of lowland, unoccupied except by several railroad tracks, and running to the Missouri river. This lowland is in times of high water overflowed,- and when the ■tide reсedes there is ordinarily left some small pools or ponds. At the time in question (August 10, 1896) this ground was open and uncovered by water, except that a pond of water was left as indicated on the plat, some one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet north of the defendant’s engine house and a like distance north of the northern end of Wyoming street. This land, too, is unplatted, having no streets, alleys or highways through it, and at. the time of the accident, hereinafter mentioned, was owned by the Suburban Belt Company. Under consent of this owner the Dold Packing Company had been in the habit of dumping on this vacant ground the ashes and cinders taken from its engine house, and they were deposited in a large heap near the pond. From plain
It seems -that the boys of the neighborhoоd were in the habit of resorting to the pond, in question, to fish and swim. On August 10, 1896, this plaintiff (a boy about four years old) was standing near the pond watching other boys fishing. One of these caught a fish, and offered it to the boy that should first get to him. Thereupon this plaintiff, in the effort to get the fish, attempted to run across the ash heap, and in doing so his feet broke through the outer crust and went into the hot ashes or smoldering fire from which he received the personal injuries compláined of in this suit. In an action for damages plaintiff recovered and defendant appealed.
After a patient сonsideration of the record in this case and the numerous authorities bearing thereon, we feel bound to reverse the judgment and to hold that under the conceded facts plaintiff can not recover. The action is grounded on the alleged negligence of 'the defendant in creating and maintaining the unprotected and unguarded pile of hot ashes and cinders near the pond of water which was attractive to, and frequently visited by the boys of that vicinity. The question then is, whether or not the facts disclosed by the record (and which we have substantially set out in thе foregoing statement) show that defendant failed to perform a duty which at the time it owed to the plaintiff. We think they do not. Unquestionably now the plaintiff was a trespasser at the place where he was injured. He had no right there, and the defendant nor the owner of the property owed him no further duty than not to wantonly injure him after discovering his presence. It is an old and , well settled principle of law that one is under no obligation to keep his premises in a safe condition for the visits of trespassers. When such persons enter unbidden and unsolicited on the lands or premises of another, they do so at their peril; the owner is not bound to look after the safety of such intruders and to protect them
In Overholt v. Vieths,
In the opinion above noticed the case of Gillespie v. McGowan, 100 Pa. St. 144, was cited with approval. In that case the defendant owned a vacant and unfenced lot in the suburbs of Philadelphia on which there was an uncovered and unprotected well. The lot was a common place of resort and play fo-r children of the neighborhood. Plaintiff’s boy, less than eight years of age, fell into the well and was drowned. In a suit by the fаther, it was held that the boy was a trespasser and defendant not liable on any charge of negligence. It was there said, quoting from an English case, that while “a man must use his property so as not to incommode his neighbor, yet the maxim extends only to neighbors who do not interfere with it or enter upon it. 'He who suffers his cattle to go at large takes upon himself the risk incident to it. If it
In the ease last cited the plaintiffs infant son was drowned while bathing in a pond made by quarrying rock on a square of vacant ground belonging to defendant. This pond, too, was unprotected and was habitually resorted to by children. It was decided that the defendant was not liable. In the Barney case it was said that “a landowner is under no duty to a mere trespasser to keep his premises safe; and the fact that the trespasser is an infant does not raise a duty where none otherwise exists.”
Richards v. Connell,
Hargraves v. Deacon,
The case of Klix v. Nieman,
In this discussion we have confined ourselves to the decisions of our state supreme court -and such other authorities as have from time to time met its approval. And in the light of these it seems to us that the plaintiff has wholly failed to establish a right of recovery. The defendant was at the time only exercising the right to deposit its cinders and ashes on private property — at a place where the plaintiff had no right to be, .where he was an intruder, and tо whom the defendant owed no duty, except not to intentionally or wantonly injure the plaintiff. And as to the pond, the alleged attraction, the defendant was in no way responsible, since it neither created nor maintained it. But if it had done so, still, under the cases above cited, said pond is not to be treated as an attractive danger within the meaning of the “turn-table oases.” Neither can defendant be held for setting a trap to catch boys or other intruders for there is no pretense that there was any such intention when the ashes and cinders were dumped on said private grounds. The doctrine which holds one responsible for spring guns, dead falls, man-traps and the like has no "application to the facts of this case. Klix v. Nieman, supra.
We are fully aware that there are some decided cases which appear to sustain plaintiff’s clаim. The case of Railway Co. v. McDonald,
The judgment then will be reversed.
