192 Mass. 37 | Mass. | 1906
1. The defendant’s contention in support of its second request for a ruling is that in a case where the minor child who is injured (after getting on the street in question without negligence on the part of his parents) has not exercised any care, the burden is on the plaintiff to prove that he was incapable of exercising any care; and that in the case at bar these plaintiffs did not sustain the burden of proving that fact; that in the case at bar that fact was left to conjecture and was not proved.
There doubtless is an age where the court can say as matter of law that a child cannot exercise any care under any circumstances. There also is an age where the court can say as matter of law that a minor is capable of exercising some care under circumstances like those in question. See in this connection Collins v. South Boston Railroad, 142 Mass. 301, 314. The
2. We are also of opinion that the question of the parents’; negligence was for the jury.
The difficulty with the argument of the defendant’s counsel here is that he has not told us what more (in his opinion) the parents were as matter of law called upon to do. Since the day
Exceptions overruled.