37 P. 477 | Or. | 1894
Opinion by
2. The contention for the defendant is, that this evidence does not in any way tend to show that the excessive or dangerous speed of the car was the proximate cause of the injury, or that it would not have occured if the car had been running at a rate of speed perfectly safe and legal. If we assume, as does the argument for the defendant, that the child, without the fault or negligence of the defendant, suddenly and unexpectedly appeared on the track immediately in front of the car, we might conclude that her death was an unavoidable accident, and that the rate of speed would be immaterial, for upon such an appearance upon the track no precaution could have prevented the accident. But because these facts are not fixed and certain the case had to go to the jury, and the
3. As a general rule, it is undoubtedly the duty of a pedestrian to look and listen before attempting to cross a street car track, and a failure to do so will bar a recovery; but this rule is not to be applied inflexibly in all cases, without regard to age or circumstances. If we assume that it can be asserted, as a proposition of law, that a child of the age of the deceased is sui juris, so as to be chargeable with negligence, the law is not so unreasonable or unjust as to require of it the same degree of reason and consideration in avoiding the consequences of the negligence of others that is required of persons of full age and capacity, and it should be left to the jury to determine whether the child, in attempting to pass in front of the car, acted with that degree of care and prudence which might reasonably be expected, under the circumstances, of a child of her age and capacity. She was lawfully in the street, and was as much entitled to use the crossing as the defendant corporation. In attempting to do so she was run over and killed by the car of defendant, running at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed. The negligence of the defendant must, therefore;, be assumed, and it was for the jury to judge whether the child’s conduct in attempting to cross the track in front of the approaching car without looking
4. By paragraph six the court simply asserts the doctrine that although the child may have been guilty of negligence in going on the track, yet, if the servants of defendant in charge of the car saw the dangerous position in which she had placed herself, it was their duty to have exercised all the diligence then possible to avoid injuring her. The terms “more than ordinary diligence,” and * ‘ extraordinary diligence, ” as used by the court, were intended to define what would constitute ordinary care under the exigencies of the situation. The term ‘ ‘ ordinary care ” is a relative term, always dependent on circumstances. What would be ordinary care in one case would be the grossest neglect in another. Thus, if an adult should be seen on a street car track it might be assumed that he would leave the track before the car reached him, but no such presumption can be indulged in as to the conduct of an infant of tender years; and hence when the court said that if the servants of defendant saw this child on the track, they were required to use more than ordinary diligence to prevent injury, it was only, in effect, saying that the age of the child required the highest degree of care on
Affirmed.