35 S.E.2d 728 | W. Va. | 1945
This is an action at law instituted in the Circuit Court of Logan County, in which Jackie Tiller, who sues by his next friend, is plaintiff, and Jeff Baisden, is defendant. On the trial of the action, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff's case, a motion was made to strike out plaintiff's evidence. That motion was sustained, the jury directed to return a verdict for the defendant, and judgment was rendered in his favor. Plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.
The action grows out of an injury sustained by plaintiff, who, at the date of the injury, was a child some two months past the age of five years. The child suffered a severe burn on the lower left leg, which required treatment during a period of approximately three months. Plaintiff's testimony shows that defendant operated a grocery store in a rural community. The store faced a paved highway, which extended between the store and a stream. The distance from the defendant's store building across the highway to the stream was approximately thirty feet. There was a berm varying in width from *128 three to six feet, between the porch of store building and the highway. The paved surface of the highway was approximately eighteen feet in width. The ground on the side of the road opposite the store sloped from six to eight feet from near the edge of the highway to the stream. It was the custom of defendant, over a considerable period, to burn paper, boxes and other refuse on the bank of the stream opposite his store. A short distance from the point at which such refuse was burned, there was a bridge over the stream where children were accustomed to gather and play, and from there along the road in front of the store. On the day plaintiff was burned, an employee of defendant had ignited a bonfire out of trash and refuse on the bank of the stream and near the edge of the highway. At the time of plaintiff's injury the bonfire was burning, but had not reached large proportions, and was under control. While an employee of defendant was at the fire, whether engaged in guarding it is not shown, two persons drove up in front of the store, and called the employee across the highway to make some inquiry about merchandise. During this absence of the employee, plaintiff's clothes caught fire, and his injury resulted. While plaintiff was accompanied by other children, the manner in which his clothes caught fire is not shown. Evidently, the injury to the plaintiff resulted from his daring or curiosity.
The action is prosecuted on the theory that the bonfire in question was an attractive nuisance. The declaration refers to it as such. It has been repeatedly held by this Court that the doctrine of attractive nuisance is not recognized in this State. Ritz v. City of Wheeling,
Following the repudiation of the attractive nuisance doctrine, as shown by the cases cited above, this Court has permitted recovery for the injury or death of children against the owner of what is known as a dangerous instrumentality or agency by him negligently used, stored or otherwise employed, and stress is laid on the duty of such owner to take particular care to guard such instrumentalities or agencies against the natural curiosity of children, especially those of tender years. For example in Rine v. Morris,
The cases cited above refer to unguarded dangerous instrumentalities or agencies of a nature attractive to children. In most instances these dangers are not open and apparent, but latent. They differ from fire in that anyone, even a child of tender years, knows what fire is, can readily observe it and recognize its dangers. Our decisions have not reached the point of holding that a controlled fire is a dangerous instrumentality or agency. Of course, everyone recognizes that fire may cause injury if permitted to get out of control, and the law makes actionable the negligent conduct of a person starting a fire, and allowing it to spread to his neighbors' premises. Whether the dangerous instrumentality rule should be extended to include a controlled bonfire has not been decided in this jurisdiction.
Having regard to this state of the law in this jurisdiction, we have made an independent investigation of the cases decided in other jurisdictions, and on this question we find the authorities are somewhat divided. In Roman v. City ofLeavenworth,
On the other hand a number of cases hold that there is no liability for injury resulting from unguarded fires. InErickson v. Great Northern Railway Co.,
It will be noted that many of these cases are decided upon the attractive nuisance doctrine, others not. It seems quite apparent from these cases, and from our own cases, that courts which have repudiated the attractive nuisance doctrine have gone very far to establish liability in another way; that is, on a theory involving a dangerous instrumentality or agency. A discussion of this question will be found in 20 R.C.L. at pages 89 and 124; also 38 Am. Jur., pages 683, 742, and 779. The question is rather fully treated in the above cited note appearing in 36 A.L.R. 297.
Some of the cases cited above refer to bonfires on the owner's premises, and other refer to trespassers. Here there was neither ownership of the premises or trespass by the plaintiff, even if it should be held that a child five years of age could be held to be a trespasser. While not clearly established, the record indicates that this bonfire was set on the right of way of the highway. If so, of course, the public had a right to be there, and there could be no trespass. On the other hand it is not claimed that the burning of this trash on the highway is the proximate cause of plaintiff's injury, but that such cause was the failure of the defendant to guard the bonfire to prevent children from being burned; nor is there any claim of any latent or concealed danger. The testimony shows that the fire was under control and had not assumed any considerable proportions at the time of the injury. Therefore, the sole question is whether an ordinary bonfire under control, ignited at a place where children are known to congregate, should be considered as a dangerous instrumentality or agency, requiring the party responsible therefor to guard the same against the known tendency of children to be drawn thereto, their curiosity concerning anything attractive to them, and their failure or incapacity to recognize danger.
The question is not easy of solution. That fire attracts children is common knowledge, but, on the other hand, it is well known, that the fear of fire is instilled in *134 the minds of children at an early age. Fire is a necessity in every home and place of business, and children continually observe it and are warned against its danger from the day they begin to realize the existence of things around them. The use of fire being so common, under so many different and varying situations, we are impressed with the idea that we should not impose too strict a rule with reference to the care required in its use. There is a public policy involved in the matter, however severe the result of the application of that policy may be in an individual case. Fire is universally, and at all times, used in burning accumulations of trash and refuse. Its domestic use extends over a scope of activities, too numerous to mention. What defendant did in the case at bar is no more than is usual and customary around rural places of business, or around the ordinary rural home. Children are everywhere. In choosing places to play they have no respect for property lines, or for highways or other public places. They go where their instincts lead them without regard to danger. If we hold the defendant liable in this action, we open the door to a wide range of situations not heretofore considered as entailing liability. We can see little distinction between this case and that of the rural washerwoman who builds a fire at the side of the road to boil clean the soiled garments and fabrics used by her family. She, too, would have to guard her fire, and every person who permits a fire at any point on his own premises to which his neighbors' children may be attracted must guard his fire. If we allow recovery in this case, where will we be able to draw the line between liability and nonliability.
In our opinion, the cases decided by this Court, cited above, respecting liability for the use, storage or employment of dangerous instrumentalities or agencies have reached the limit to which we should go. We do not think fire is a dangerous instrumentality or agency in the sense in which those cases apply the doctrine applicable thereto. We think the weight of authority in *135 other jurisdictions sustains this view. As noted above, most of the cases decided by this Court were applied to situations where the danger was latent, quite different from that of a bonfire which everyone can see and which, in itself, is a warning that even the smallest child will ordinarily heed.
If, as indicated above, we cannot hold fire to be a dangerous instrumentality or agency, within the meaning of the cases defining those terms, then to justify recovery herein we would be compelled to follow the attractive nuisance doctrine upon which this action is expressly pleaded. The attractive nuisance doctrine first came into prominence through the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Railroad Co. v. Stout, 17 Wall. 657,
There are no disputed facts in this case. The question of law raised on undisputed facts was for the circuit court. That court committed no error in deciding that question in favor of the defendant, in directing a verdict in his favor, and entering judgment thereon. Its action in so doing is affirmed.
Affirmed. *136