delivered the opinion of the conrt.
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by a minor child. Verdict and judgment for $2,500 were in plaintiff’s favor and defendant has appealed.
Richard Wilinski, eleven years old at the time, was injured September 27,1952, when he fell from a ladder at the rear of a building under construction by, and in possession of, defendant. Wilinski was playing “hide and go seek” with his brother and ran into the building. The building had neither doors nor windows and he entered through the front door frame. He went to the rear where a “homemade” ladder rested against the door frame and when he was descending the ladder a rung broke and he fell to the ground and was injured.
Defendant contends that the court erred in denying its motion for directed verdict. It claims that there is no proof that the building was defective or that defendant owned or possessed the ladder. This claim presupposes the judgment must rest upon the “attractive nuisance” theory, and is addressed to the absence of proof of defendant’s ownership of the ladder and to plaintiff’s testimony that the ladder could not be seen from the street. Defendant also refers us to cases from foreign jurisdictions in support of its theory that neither the ladder nor “building under construction” comes within the attractive nuisance rule.
We think these claims are disposed of by the rule announced by our Supreme Court in Kahn v. James Burton Co.,
We think the instant complaint states facts sufficient to support a judgment based upon the ordinary negligence theory as applied to an eleven year old boy. The alleged “attractive” element is the unguarded “tempting, open building.”
The ruling on the motion for directed verdict is tested by taking only the evidence favorable to plaintiff and drawing legal inferences most favorable for him to decide whether there is any evidence to prove the elements of his case. (March v. Hirshman,
From that evidence the jury could infer that defendant knew or should have known that the boys were playing in and about the building. It could infer that defendant should have foreseen that the open, or even partially barricaded doors would attract small boys into the building; that once a boy entered he might, in playing or investigating, walk about the unfinished building and find the rear opening; that since there were no rear stairs a workman or some other person was likely to use and leave a ladder at the rear opening; that a boy in the building would probably use the ladder in getting out the rear of the building; and that in climbing down the ladder a boy might be injured.
It is our opinion that the evidence and inferences recited were sufficient to take the case to the jury.
Defendant argues that the ladder was the instrumentality causing the injury, that it was not visible from the front where the boys habitually played and could not have attracted the boys, and that buildings under construction have been ruled not to be attractive nuisances. It was not necessary that the ladder itself be the “attraction” in order to render defendant liable if the building under construction was sufficiently attractive. (Oglesby v. Metropolitan West Side Elevated Ry. Co.,
In the instant case we have proof of the latent danger in the “homemade ladder” which the boy found after being attracted to the partially completed building. We have read cases cited by the majority in the Indiana case and think that they, like the majority opinion, are not persuasive here. The dissenting opinions are more consistent with Illinois law as expressed in Kahn v. James Burton Co.,
The law is well settled that the question of contributory negligence of a boy eleven years of age must be left to the jury. (Maskaliunas v. Chicago & W. I. R. Co.,
We see no merit in the claim that the court committed reversible error in instructing the jury. There is evidence to support an instruction that the building under construction was “attractive” to children and “lured” the boy into a “dangerous situation.” The jury could infer that the ladder leaning against the building was sufficiently connected to it to be considered part of the building and therefore that the condition of the building as a whole was dangerous and unsafe.
For the reasons given, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
