delivered the opinion of the Court.
A jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County rendered verdicts in favor of the defendant in two cases that were tried together; one was an action under Lord Campbell’s Act for negligence causing the death of Keith Taylor, aged 5 years and 10 months, and the other was by the administratrix of the deceased child. From judgments entered upon these verdicts, the plaintiffs below have appealed.
*98 In the early afternoon of March 10, 1955, a clear, sunny day, the appellee was operating his automobile in a westerly direction on Edmondson Avenue, in Baltimore. At the location of the accident, this avenue is 60 feet, 3 inches wide, and is traversed by two street-car tracks. The two tracks are 6 feet apart and the distance between the individual rails of each track is 5 feet, 10 inches. The distance from the south curb of Edmondson Avenue to the southernmost streetcar rail and from the north curb to the northernmost rail is, in each case, a little over 21 feet. A playground entrance on the north side of said avenue is 98 feet west from the west curb of Evergreen Avenue at its intersection with Edmondson Avenue. The deceased child, with other children, was on the south side of Edmondson Avenue, and, intending to cross the avenue to the playground, they walked from said south side to the southern car track, when the deceased started to run for the playground entrance. At that time, the appellee, who had his wife as a passenger, was operating his automobile on Edmondson Avenue in a westerly direction a few inches to the north of the northernmost street-car rail. The car collided with the child, who died as a result of the injuries received. The plaintiffs’ witness, Turner, stated the left front bumper of the appellee’s automobile struck the child, while the appellee and his wife testified the child came into the left side of the car.
I
The appellants first contend that the trial court’s charge was incomplete with respect to the duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ decedent under the circumstances of this case. They argue that if the death had been that of an adult, the instructions on primary negligence probably were proper; but, in the instant case, the charge wholly ignored the well-established legal principle that the caution owed by an operator of a motor vehicle to a child of tender years is greater than that owed to an adult, whose age, experience and training reasonably can be expected to be utilized to avoid danger.
In this regard, there was testimony, although some of it was disputed, from which the jury could have found the following facts; when the deceased boy had walked from the *99 curb to the south street-car track and started to run toward the playground, the appellee was some 140 feet to the east, operating his car between 30 and 35 miles per hour in a 25 mile zone; the street was straight, with no moving traffic thereon; and, without at any time observing the child or slowing his car, the appellee struck the child with the front of his car when the child was just a few inches north of the northern car track.
The court instructed the jury concerning the burden of proof, defined negligence, and then stated:
“that if you believe from the evidence that the defendant, Mr. Barlly, was operating his automobile as an ordinarily prudent person would operate an automobile under the same or similar circumstances as existed in this case, and if you believe from the evidence that the accident complained of was not due to any failure on the part of the defendant, Mr. Barlly, to use reasonable and ordinary care as any other reasonable person would have Used in the operation of his automobile, then, of course, your verdict should be for the defendant, Mr. Barlly.”
As an abstract statement of law, there is little, if anything, to be found wrong with this quotation. However, the court had not mentioned the fact that the deceased was a child of tender years, and did not do so until he instructed on contributory negligence. The judge did not inform the jury that it was the defendant’s duty, even between intersections, to keep a proper lookout for children who may suddenly come out into the street in front of him; nor that the defendant was required by law to recognize that children of tender years, do not use the same degree of care and caution for their own safety as do adults. The appellants were entitled to have the jury instructed upon their theory of the case. The deceased was under six years of age. The law requires greater-caution from the operator of a motor vehicle who observes, a child in the middle of the street than one who sees an adult;. and, if his vision were unobscured for 100 feet, or more, it places a duty upon him to see the child. From the above evi
*100
dence, the jury, if they so desired, were at liberty to conclude that the appellee, having an unobstructed view for some distance, could have avoided striking the child, if he had been driving at a rate of speed that was reasonable under the circumstances and had used proper care to look out for the boy.
Miller v. Graff,
This Court has held that we cannot put the “trial judge in a strait-jacket and prescribe or adopt a formula to be ■used and followed by him,” with reference to his charge to the jury.
Feinglos v. Weiner,
What we have said does not, in any way, alter the previous rulings of this Court in such cases as
Cocco v. Lissau,
II
The appellants requested the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiffs’ decedent could not, under any circumstances, be guilty of contributory negligence, because he was a child of only 5 years and 10 months of age. They cite to us the cases of
Miller v. Graff, supra; Bozman v. State, 177
Md. 151, 155,
“The first contention in respect to the court’s ruling on the prayers is that a boy seven years of age, as a matter of law, cannot be charged with contributory negligence. It seems clear that the weight of authority in this country outside of our state supports such a contention, some of the courts holding that children under the age of six are incapable of contributory negligence, while the apparent majority fix seven as the age below which they are conclusively presumed to be incapable. This, however, is not the rule of this jurisdiction, it being here held that the question is one to be submitted to the jury under proper instructions.”
The only ruling of this Court, prior to the
Miller
case, as to the minimum age below which a child cannot as a matter of law be held guilty of contributory negligence seems to be
Caroline County v. Beulah,
In view of these previous decisions, we are not inclined to enlarge the ruling in the Miller case, i. e., that a child four years of age cannot be guilty of contributory negligence. We, therefore, hold that a child, 5 years of age or over, may be guilty of contributory negligence; but a child of tender years is bound only to use that degree of care which ordinarily prudent children of the same age, experience and intelligence are accustomed to use under the same circumstances, and they assume the risk only of dangers, the existence of which they know, or which, in the exercise of this degree of care, they should have known. No question was raised concerning the doctrine of the imputability of the negligence of parents of children of tender years, as the same is applicable under some circumstances. There was no error in the trial court’s refusal to rule as a matter of law that the deceased child could not be guilty of contributory negligence.
*103 III
As their final argument, the appellants claim they were entitled to an instruction from the trial coprt upon the theory of the doctrine of last clear chance. This Court has so frequently and recently set forth the factors that are essential to bring this doctrine into play that it would serve no useful purpose to repeat them here.
Legum v. State,
It is implicit in the rule that both the plaintiff and defendant were negligent. The doctrine presupposes a perilous situation, created or existing through the negligence of both the defendant and the plaintiff.
State v. Wash., B. & A. R. Co.,
As we found under II that the child was old enough to present a jury question as to whether his conduct constituted contributory negligence, it was the jury’s province to determine if he were guilty of contributory negligence or his actions resulted merely from impulse or bewilderment to be expected in one of his age, experience and intelligence. If the jury should conclude that the child was responsible for its own safety,
i. e.,
guilty of contributory negligence, it is apparent, from what we have said above, that his negligence would have been concurrent with any in the driving of the
*104
appellee, which would have prevented recovery by the appellant, and the doctrine of last clear chance would have no application.
Stafford v. Zake, supra,
The case of
Stafford v. Zake, supra,
For the error contained in I, the case will be remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed and case remanded for a new trial.
