Court Opinion

ID: 3590997
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:39:38.077481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:08.292922
License: Public Domain

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. The plaintiff on May 26, 1912, was struck by a trolley car of the defendant, and his right leg was so injured that it was necessary to amputate it a little below the knee. At the time of the accident he was between eight and nine years old. The accident occurred on Crocheron avenue, in Bayside, on the double track trolley line running from Bayside to Flushing. It occurred on a Sunday. The plaintiff left his home a short time before the accident to attend a Sunday school at the Polish Catholic church, which is situated on the north side of the avenue a short distance east of the place where the accident occurred. While waiting for the hour at which the Sunday school was to convene, he, with fifteen or twenty other children, was playing upon water pipes that had been distributed along the north side of the avenue near the west-bound track of the defendant. The trolley line as it comes from the east enters Crocheron avenue at right angles thereto from Chambers street at a point about 500 feet east of the place where the accident occurred. The defendant's motorman testified that he came up Chambers street to the avenue and "started to go on down the road and saw a lot of children playing along the pipes running back and forth and jumping off, and I (he) went slowly down *Page 54 
there and blew the whistle and rung the bell, and when I (he) got within five or six foot this boy jumped off the pipe and ran right straight out in front of the car." The motorman was substantially corroborated by disinterested witnesses, but the testimony presented on behalf of the plaintiff was different.
We must assume from the record that the jury had a right to find that the trolley car was run "fast" and that the motorman did not blow the whistle or ring the bell. From the testimony offered in behalf of the plaintiff the jury could have found that a few minutes before the trolley car in question came in sight from Chambers street, the plaintiff left the pipes where he was playing and went across the car tracks into the bushes south of the avenue, and after remaining there about two minutes started to return, and that the trolley car turned from Chambers street into Crocheron avenue when the plaintiff was on the second rail from the south as he was returning to the place on the pipes which he left a few minutes before. It could also have found that when the plaintiff was on the first rail from the south he looked towards Chambers street and at that time no car was in sight and that he then continued in a diagonal direction with his face turned away from the car and that the car after entering Crocheron avenue continued at a rapid rate of speed without blowing a whistle or sounding a bell until the plaintiff was struck as stated as he was leaving the last rail on which the car was proceeding. No claim was made in this court that the question of the defendant's negligence was not one of fact for the jury. The Appellate Division has held as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and it has not only reversed the judgment of the trial court, but has dismissed the plaintiff's complaint.
The question whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in not again looking to the east after passing the first rail to the south although no whistle *Page 55 
was blown or bell rung by the motorman was decided in favor of the plaintiff by the jury. In so deciding the jury were permitted to consider the plaintiff's age, experience, mental development and general capacity to care for himself and to exercise judgment and discretion. (Zwack v. N.Y., Lake Erie  Western R.R. Co.,160 N.Y. 362; Lafferty v. Third Ave. R.R. Co., 176 N.Y. 594;Costello v. Third Ave. R.R. Co., 161 N.Y. 317; Simkoff v.Lehigh Valley R.R. Co., 190 N.Y. 256; Jacobs v. Koehler S.G.Co., 208 N.Y. 416.)
The plaintiff was offered as a witness in his own behalf and the judge sitting at the Trial Term questioned him and listened to his answers to questions propounded by his counsel and then refused to permit him to be sworn as a witness. In so doing he necessarily held that the plaintiff did not sufficiently appreciate the nature of an oath to warrant the acceptance of his testimony as a witness.
In presenting the case to the jury the court say: "He was not permitted, as you notice, to be sworn as a witness in the case by the court because he did not apparently understand the nature and obligations of an oath. Under the law, a witness who does not understand; a witness whose age is too young, or whose instruction has not been sufficient to guide him and instruct him in the obligations of an oath, cannot be sworn as a witness in a civil action. * * * The result of that would be just the same as if the child had been unable to talk; so young in age that he was unable to speak or to give any statement at all about the accident. So you have to judge of the merits of his claim by the testimony of the other witnesses in the case." This case was decided, therefore, without the plaintiff making any statement about the accident.
The court also charged the jury: "This boy is not in law chargeable with the same degree of care for his own safety as if he were an adult. He is only liable for that *Page 56 
degree of care which a boy of his age and intelligence and previous experience and training would be expected to employ under the conditions which existed at this time and place. It is for you to say, gentlemen, and not for the court to hold as a matter of law, that this boy was what we call in law, suijuris. That is, that he was at this time exercising that degree of control of his actions which would be expected of a person of riper years. You must decide whether he was sui juris or whether he was not. If you find that he was sui juris, then you will expect and require that he shall exercise that degree of control which a person of that age would be expected to employ. If he was not, then if his parents or guardians did not exercise a reasonable degree of care for his safety under these conditions, their negligence, if you find that there was any, would be attributable to him."
No evidence was offered on the trial with special reference to the negligence, if any, of the parents or guardians of the plaintiff. It appears that the plaintiff was by his mother sent to Sunday school in company with his brother who was eleven years old. No claim is urged in this court that the plaintiff's parents or guardians were negligent. The jury were instructed to determine whether the plaintiff was sui juris. They may have found that he was not sui juris. In any event they have found for the plaintiff and thereby negatived all contributory negligence on his part or the part of his parents or guardians.
We think that under the circumstances disclosed and considering the age of the plaintiff it cannot be said as a matter of law that he was guilty of contributory negligence.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the case remitted to that court for it to consider the weight of evidence, with costs in this court.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN, CARDOZO and POUND, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc. *Page 57