This is an action brought by the appellee, individually and as nest friend,to recover damages for injuries sustained when his ten-year-old son Bobby was struck in the eye by a pellet fired from a BB gun. The plaintiff’s theory is that the defendant, John E. Williams, was negligent in failing to supervise and control his own ten-year-old son David, who owned the gun, and his eleven-year-old daughter Libby, who was holding the weapon when the accident happened. The jury returned verdicts for the plaintiff totaling $12,500. The appellant’s only contention here is that he was entitled to a directed verdict.
There is hardly any dispute about the facts. Williams owned a 32-unit motel, where his family had living-quarters. David, since the time he ivas eight, had owned three or four BB guns. About two months before the incident now in question there had been a complaint by a motel guest about David’s handling of such a gun. According to this guest, David and another boy were bouncing BB’s off ice that had formed on the motel swimming pool. One pellet hit the guest; others hit windows, breaking one of them. Upon receiving that complaint Williams instructed his son to put the gun away and not to take it out on the motel premises. Thereafter the gun and the BB’s were kept in a clothes closet. There is no evidence that David had disobeyed his father’s instructions before the night when Bobby was hurt.
On that night the Davidsons were visiting the Williаmses at the motel. (Mrs. Davidson and Mrs. Williams are sisters.) The accident happened at about ten o’clock. Earlier that evening the two boys had tried to take the gun out, but Mrs. Williams saw them with the weapon and made them put it back. Later on, however, they succeeded in getting the gun and taking it outside, where all three children took turns in target practice. At the moment of the accident Bobby, thinking it to be his turn, was reaching for the gun. Libby, who was holding it, pulled it back to keep Bobby from getting it. The gun went off accidentally and struck Bobby in the right eye, causing a permanent partial loss of vision. The court’s instructions, which are not questioned, included AMI 606, explaining a parent’s duty to exercise reasonable means to control his child. Bieker v. Owens,
Therе is, of course, no contention that Williams is liable for the conduct of his children merely because he is their father. Instead, the appellee insists that Williams was himself at fault in keeping both the gun and the ammunition in a place readily accessible to the children, after having notice of David’s earlier carelessness. Counsel invoke the principle, annоunced by many authorities, that a person may he held responsible for harm resulting from his negligence in allowing a young or inexperienced child to get possession of a firearm such as a shotgun or .22 rifle.
Counsel for the appellant, though conceding the force of that principle of law, insist that a BB gun or an air rifle is merely a toy comparable to а pocketknife, a how and arrow set, or a baseball bat, all of which may he used in such a way as to inflict serious injuries. Specifically, four cases are cited in support оf the appellant’s position. We have examined those cases, and many others, hut they do not convince us that the appellant was entitled to a directed verdict.
Thе first case relied upon by the appellant is an 1891 decision, Chaddock v. Plummer,
The Chaddock decision, handed down seventy-five years ago, was effectively circumscribed by a 1966 Michigan decision, Whalen v. Bennett,
The appellant next cites Harris v. Cameron,
Moreover, the Harris case, like the Chaddock case in Michigan, cannot be regarded as the law today. In Gerlat v. Christianson,
The third case relied upon is Capps v. Carpenter,
Fourth, counsel cite Lane v. Chatham,
Wе do not mean that the appellant’s contention is without support in the cases. There are undoubtedly a few courts that would approve a directed verdict in a cаse such as this one. See, for instance, Norlin v. Connolly,
In the present case the appellant, with knowledge that his son had misused a BB gun in the past, left the weapon and the ammunition in an unlocked closet. His conduct may be contrasted with that of the father in Tatum v. Lance,
Affirmed.
