Court Opinion

ID: 6902658
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:56:32.032731+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:13.623516
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Burnett
delivered the opinion of the court.
According to the bill of exceptions, Mr. Johnson, a passenger on the car. testified for plaintiff to the effect that he looked out of the car window to see why it was running so fast, and saw the boy about 8 or 10 feet from the car tracks. He estimated the distance between the front end of the car and where the boy was to be from -60 to 100-feet, and that at that time the child was standing still. Violet Sundt, a little girl who was playing with the little fellow, said that he got afraid of a dog on the sidewalk and backed off into the car; that he backed all the way from the sidewalk to the track, all *425the time looking at the dog; that when he commenced to retreat from the dog the car was about a half a block distant; that he stopped a moment on the curb, and when he stepped off the curb the car was so close that she saw there was going to be an accident sure. Miss Helen Sundt sat on a porch opposite which the accident occurred. She was a witness for the plaintiff, and testified that she saw the little boy just before he got killed; that he was in the street right near the curb, and backed off all of an instant into the car. He was standing below the curb, and as the car came along he backed right into it, right into the car, very quickly. T. W. Alexander, a witness for the defendant, also a passenger on the car, testified, in substance, that he could see the children all the time until the car came around on the curve, when his vision was cut off by the trees and telegraph poles; that the last he saw of them they were on the sidewalk playing, and he heard a scream and realized that they must have hit one of the children, and he stepped down on the lower step and could see the little boy under the hind trucks of the car, and he immediately swung off the car.
1-3. The principal error of which the plaintiff complains in his brief is that the court did not present his theory of the case to the jury. Among other directions to the jury, the court gave the following:
“I instruct you that there was no duty resting upon the defendant’s motorman to slacken the speed of or to stop the car, merely because the deceased was in a safe place upon the sidewalk, or in a safe place in the street, or near the curb, as the defendant’s car approached. No such duty arises until the motorman sees, or, in the exercise of ordinary and reasonable care, should see, that the child or person so situated is about to or liable to get in the path of the approaching car.”
*426The following three instructions, asked by the plaintiff, were refused:
(a) ‘‘If a person, and especially one of tender years, is approaching a street car track, it is the duty of the motorman in charge of said car to slacken the speed or stop the car, if necessary, to avoid a collision. If, therefore, the said. Cesare Cerrano was seen by the motorman in the act of approaching the track upon which said car was being then operated, or ought to have made it apparent, if said motorman was exercising ordinary care, that said Cesare Cerrano was unaware of the approach of said car, or if said motorman, in the exercise of ordinary care, ought to have seen said Cesare Cerrano so approaching said track, and there was then sufficient time for an ordinary skillful motorman to stop said car and prevent a collision with said Cesare Cerrano it was the motorman’s duty to stop the said car and avoid a collision, and if he failed to do so defendant was negligent.”
(5) “If the motorman of said car saw, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have seen, Cesare Cerrano approaching said track in a manner and under such conditions that an ordinarily prudent person observing him would have concluded that said Cesare Cerrano was not aware of the approach of said car, or was paying no heed thereto, then I instruct you that said motorman had no right to assume that said Cesare Cerrano would stop before reaching the track, or would hasten and cross before said car.”
(c) “Even if you should find that the motorman did not see the said Cesare Cerrano approaching said track, if you find that, in the exercise of ordinary care, he should have seen him so approaching said track in front of said car in time for an ordinarily skillful motorman, in the exercise of ordinary care, to have stopped said car and avoided a collision, then, if he failed to see said Cesare Cerrano so approaching said track, and failed to stop said car, defendant was negligent.”
So far as mere negligence is concerned, either party, the one inflicting or the one receiving the injury, is bound by what he knew, or might have known by the exercise *427of ordinary care and diligence. This element is recognized in the instructions given by the court to which the plaintiff excepted. That excerpt from the charge is a proper statement of the law in a negative form, and from the standpoint of the defendant. It remains to consider, on this branch of the case, whether the instructions requested by the plaintiff and refused by the court properly declared the law according to the theory of the plaintiff. Although it is a true principle that each party is entitled to have his theory of the case stated to the jury, provided there is any testimony sustaining such theory, leaving the facts to the jury, yet in order to properly present the question on appeal, it must appear that the requests of the complaining party to the court to charge the jury have correctly enunciated the law applicable to the theory propounded by the complaining party.
4-8. What is known as the doctrine of “last clear chance” goes at least as far as to hold that, although the injured party has by his own negligence put himself in a place of danger, yet, if the party inflicting the injury saw the perlious situation in time to have avoided it by the exercise of ordinary care, the latter is liable for the ensuing injury, notwithstanding the previous negligence of the former. There is room for argument as to whether or not the party inflicting the injury is bound in such a case by what he merely might have known by proper attention, but did not actually know. However, it is not essential to consider that in this case. A necessary element in such instances is the actual or apparent danger of the party receiving the injury, as the situation may appear to a reasonably prudent man under all the circumstances. It is a culpable wrong to hurt one who has placed himself in a position of danger even negligently, if the injury can be avoided by the exercise of ordinary care, when the peril becomes apparent to the party con*428ducting the instrument of danger. We do not decide that a defendant is bound, or not, merely by what it might have known by the exercise of ordinary prudence, where the situation is brought about by the previous negligence of the injured party; but we do hold that there must be either actual or apparent danger to the one suffering the hurt. A contrary holding, or the approval of the three requests of the plaintiff, already quoted, would be to unnecessarily cripple street car service and require a motorman to stop his car whenever a child appeared upon the street, no matter how far distant. No one owes a duty to another, unless the latter is liable to be affected injuriously by the neglect of duty on the part of the former. The quoted requests of the plaintiff, which were refused by the court, omit entirely the consideration of the actual or apparent danger to the child, and were, for this reason, properly refused. For the same reason, the allegation of the complaint, already mentioned, is defective, and does not state a condition rendering the defendant liable. For all that appears in the complaint, the child may have been visible a half a mile away from the car; but that would not ordinarily call into action any emergent measures to stop the car. It is the existence of actual or apparent danger to the party receiving the injury which demands exertion by the other party to avoid the injury; and this danger must be pleaded m order to make a cause of action against a defendant in such cases. Illustrating the principle that in situations of peril, brought into being by the actions or neglect of both parties, it is the danger to the injured one, ascertainable long enough before the collision to have prevented it, which is one of the essentials to charge a defendant, the following cases are instructive: Bunyan v. Citizens’ Ry. Co., 127 Mo. 12 (29 S. W. 842) ; Smith v. Houston & T. C. R. Co., 17 Tex. Civ. App. 502 (43 S. W. 34); Me Andrews v. St. Louis & S. Ry. Co., 83 Mo. App. 233; *429Austin, etc., Ry. Co. v. Goldstein, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 704 (45 S. W. 600) ; Klockenbrink v. St. Louis, etc., R. R. Co., 81 Mo. App. 351.
9, 10. The plaintiff also complains that the court erred in refusing the following instruction, which he requested:
“The standard of care by which Cesare Cerrano’s actions must be weighed is what an ordinarily prudent child of his age would have done, being similarly situated as he was.”
In connection with the principle of “last clear chance,” which we have been discussing this instruction would have been proper if the element of danger had been pleaded; for in estimating the real or apparent danger the motorman was bound to take into consideration all such circumstances. Proximity to a street car track is far more dangerous to a child of tender years than to an experienced adult; and, while in both cases the motorman must use ordinary care, yet the degree of absolute care which he owes to a- child is far greater than that due to the adult. In their brief counsel for the plaintiff claim that this instruction was requested for the purpose of affecting the duty of the motorman towards the child. We have shown, however, no active duty is owing from the motorman towards the child until the latter is or appears to be in danger; and this element is neither pleaded in the complaint, nor mentioned in the requested instructions. This direction would be applicable to the issue of contributory negligence raised by the defendant in its answer; but the plaintiff says it was not offered for that purpose, and states in his brief that contributory negligence was not pleaded or claimed as a defense in the case. In speaking of negligence, the court said to the jury:
“Now, negligence is defined by the law as the failure to do what a reasonably prudent person would ordinarily *430have done under the circumstances of the situation, or doing what a reasonably prudent person would ordinarily not have done under the circumstances of the situation.”
This states the general principle upon which the conduct of a person is based, a departure from which would be negligence. Considering the purpose of the plaintiff in offering this instruction, and his disclaimer of the matter of contributory negligence, we cannot say that the court erred in omitting to give this instruction, especially when the general principle of negligence was so concisely and fairly enunciated in the charge given by the court.
11. In respect to the excessive rate of speed at which the car was alleged to have been operated, and the lack of proper fenders thereon, together with the failure to use the fender that was attached to the car, all alleged as negligence, the court charged the jury that if the deceased appeared upon the track so suddenly and unexpectedly that the accident would have happened, although the car was going at a lawful rate of speed, and although the fender might have been of the lawful kind and properly operated, these things should not be considered as material, and to these instructions the plaintiff objects. In Wallace v. Railway Co., 26 Or. 174 (37 Pac. 477: 25 L. R. A. 663), Mr. Chief Justice Bean laid down the rule thus:
“The contention for the defendant is that the 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 occurred 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 *431upon such an appearance upon the track no precaution could have prevented the accident.” '
The fair deduction to be made from this language is that it is a question of fact to be submitted to the j urr whether or not the appearance of the deceased upon the track was so sudden that no precaution would have prevented the accident, and that under such circumstances the lack of proper appliances or the excessive speed of the car becomes immaterial. In the view of the law thus announced, this question was properly submitted to the jury in the case at bar, and the verdict amounts to a finding that the accident would have occurred, notwithstanding the car was moving at an unreasonable rate of speed, or was without proper appliances. The sudden death of a little child under such circumstances wrings the heart of any man above the grade of a brute; but the jury evidently believed from the testimony that the child appeared so suddenly in dangerous proximity to the car that it was impossible for the motorman to stop the car. They must have thought, also, that the babe’s death was pure accident, which reasonable diligence could not prevent, and that the motorman was not negligent, where his shortcoming would be attended with such shocking consequences. The verdict for the defendant is one which we do not feel at»liberty to disturb.
The judgment must be affirmed. Affirmed.