Ames v. Broadway & Seventh Avenue R. R. Co.

24 Jones & S. 3
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 7, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Jones & S. 3 (Ames v. Broadway & Seventh Avenue R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Broadway & Seventh Avenue R. R. Co., 24 Jones & S. 3 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

By the Court.—O’Gorman, J.

(after stating the facts as above)—The chief question now to be discussed is whether the issue, as to the .contributory negligence of -the plaintiff’s mother, should not have been decided by the court, as a question of law.

The learned trial judge was, in my opinion, right in refusing to do so.

The material facts are these: The infant plaintiff lived with her mother, on the first floor of a house in .Union Court, which was a court-yard opening on the west side of University Place, between East Eleventh and East Twelfth streets, and communicating with University Place, by a passageway, about nine feet wide. This Union Court was about thirteen feet wide, and contained a few houses, of which, that in which the plaintiff lived, was the second from the passageway leading to University Place. On the day of the injury to the plaintiff, she had asked her mother to let her go out, and her mother let her out a little while to play in the court-yard, then she came in again; then, she pressed her mother to let her out again for a little while. Her mother put on her hat and told her not to go from the door. The child said “ no, mamma.” Her mother told her to play about the front of the house there—not to go away from the door. The mother then left her, in order to attend to another of her children, and within five minutes afterwards, the information reached her that the plaintiff had been run over. The plaintiff had been accustomed to play in the court a good deal, but on this occasion, it appears that she went with another child, who lived in the court, to a [6]*6candy store on the east side of University Place, and on recrossing that street in order to return to Union Court, the plaintiff was run over.

Did this evidence supply such proof of negligence on the part of the mother, contributing to the disaster, as required, or authorized the court to charge the jury, as matter of law, that such negligence had existed ? In my opinion, it was not negligence per se, in the mother to allow the plaintiff to play in the court. McGarry v. Loomis, 63 N. Y. 107. The important question is, whether the fact, that near and easy means of access into the street from the court existing, through which the plaintiff could stray into the open street, the permission given by her mother to her to play in the court, without continued supervision, or protection against her going outside the court into the street, was not negligence per se, on the part of the mother. Was it an. omission of such care as persons of ordinary prudence exercise and deem adequate to the circumstances of the case ? Mangam v. Brooklyn R. R. Co., 38 N. Y. 457.

Negligence is a question of fact, and should be left to the jury, as such, when men of ordinary prudence may differ as to the character of the act, under the circumstances of the case, the positions and conditions of the parties. Wendell v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 91 N. Y., 427.

In Kunz v. City of Troy, 104 N. Y. 350, the obligation of the parent of an infant non sui juris, is thus described :—“ The law exacts no impossibility. It does not require an infant, before reaching the age of discretion, to exercise discretion. But it imposes upon parents and guardians the duty of using reasonable care to protect those incapable of protecting themselves, and if they fail to exercise such care, and the infant is thereby brought into danger and suffers injury from the negligent act of another, their negligence is deemed the negligence of the infant.” In that case, the father left his infant son, for a few minutes, unattended on the side[7]*7walk, which was there incumbered by fixtures taken from a store near by, and heaped on the sidewalk. One of these fixtures fell upon the child. The court of appeals' decided that the dismissal of the complaint was error, and that the case should have gone to the jury.

There is this similarity between the facts of that case and those of the case at bar. The permission of the father to the child to walk on the sidewalk, was not per se negligent. The question for the jury was, whether the fact that a part of the sidewalk was dangerous, and within easy reach of the child did not make the permission given, negligence.

The question of negligence in the driver of defendant’s car was also properly left to the jury.

The exceptions to the various rulings of the trial judge, are not well taken.

That part of the judge’s charge in which the use of the word “vigilant” occurs, and which is objected to, is similar to the charge of Judge Grover, in Mangam v. Brooklyn R. R. Co. (supra), page' 456, and was besides, so explained by the rest of the charge, as to be wholly unob j ectionable.

The judgment and order should be affirmed with costs.

Freedman, J-, concurred.

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Related

Kunz v. . City of Troy
10 N.E. 442 (New York Court of Appeals, 1887)
McGarry v. . Loomis
63 N.Y. 104 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Wendell v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad
91 N.Y. 420 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Jones & S. 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-broadway-seventh-avenue-r-r-co-nysuperctnyc-1888.