Boland v. Missouri Railroad

36 Mo. 484
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 36 Mo. 484 (Boland v. Missouri Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boland v. Missouri Railroad, 36 Mo. 484 (Mo. 1865).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit under the statute, commenced by the plaintiffs against defendant, to recover damages for the killing of their daughter, a child aged about two years. From the record, we gather these facts: The little child, unattended, was walking across Market street, over the paved crossing, on the west side of Fifth street, one of the most public thoroughfares in the city of St. Louis, and at the same time defendant’s horse car was going west over Fifth street on Market street. The child was proceeding in a fast walk and the by-standers, seeing her danger, cried aloud to the driver to stop the car; but the driver’s attention being turned in another direction, he did not stop till the child was run over and killed.

C. B. Wardrop testified for the plaintiffs: “I was crossing Fifth street going west, out Market street; the horse-car was going out also ; I was north of the horse-car track. I saw the little child start from the curb to go from the north-west to the south-west corner of Market and Fifth streets, on the paving across the street, and I ran toward the car as fast as I could hallooing to the driver to stop, and another man just ahead of me was hallooing, and ran towards the car; the driver’s attention seemed to be called to the opposite side of the street. The car continued going on, and the child’s head struck the front point of the steps and the wheel passed over its body. The child was three or four feet from the car when I hallooed; the car was going at a very slow walk; the horses did not touch the child. I think the step of the car above struck the child; I think the corner of the step touched the child ; it fell forwards straight across the track; [488]*488the child at the time I hallooed was five or six feet from the driver, the driver standing at the brake at the right of the platform where the child was struck. There was a wagon standing near the corner on the south side of street, and the driver had the brake in his hand, and seemed to fear, a collision Vith the wagon. I can’t say which went faster, the child or the car; the child went between a run and a walk, as fast as children usually toddle. I ran as far as the east end of the car, where the child was run over. If the driver had been looking towards the child at the time, I'think he could have stopped the car; the other man was near me and hallooed about the same time I did. I heard the child make a noise when the car struck it; it threw its arms back when it was picked up; I can’t say whether the child lived or died, for I went away after the child was picked up.”

Defendant admitted that the child was killed.

On cross-examination, the witness stated :• “ The wagon on the south side of Market street was standing still; I think the eyes of the driver were upon the wagon; there had been rubbish there all the spring, between the wagon and the track. It seemed to me, then,_ that there was danger of a collision between 'the wagon and the car; it stopped directly upon the child; I think the driver stopped as soon as he could; the driver had his hand on the brake all the time ; the driver was going slow to prevent a collision. I don’t think the driver saw the child until the car struck it; I cried out, 1 Hold on, stop!’ The driver stopped as soon as he could after he heard the cry ‘ hold on ;’ the speed of the car determines the distance in which it can be stopped; don’t think it possible to tell how soon a car can be stopped. I saw no one attending the child; it was a little infant child just about able to walk. I don’t think the child ran on the crossing; my impression is that the child did not run as fast as it could go; it toddled across the street about as fast as a little child usually goes. I can’t tell how long it was going across; it might be a minute or a minute and a half before the car struck the child; I went as fast as I could, and the [489]*489child was thrown down before I got to it. When I first saw the child, it was stepping from the curb-stone on the crossing ; I don’t think any relations appeared to claim the child; the man who took the child in his arms was a stranger to me. I don’t know that it occurred to me at the time, that the driver did not stop as soon as he could; I think the dri- / ver stopped as soon as he could; I looked directly at the driver, to see if he would stop for the child ; he was looking at the wagon on the south side of Market street. He had his hand on the brake with his knee against the dash-board; 1 saw nobody that had charge of the child. I think the wagon was standing, but it might have been moving; if it was moving, it was a very slow motion. I can’t say now, but I suppose I thought it moving when I gave my deposition. The corner of Fifth and Market streets is one of the most frequented thoroughfares in the city of St. Louis.”

This was substantially all the evidence in regard to the killing. There was some other evidence given by the plaintiffs in the cause, but it need not be noticed, as it does not alter or vary the above. When the plaintiffs rested, the defendants asked and the court gave the following instruction:

“ That on the evidence in this cause, the plaintiffs cannot recover.”

Plaintiffs thereupon took a non-suit, and after an unavailing motion to set the same aside, bring the case here by writ of error.

It is argued by the counsel for the defendant, that permitting a child so young, and so obviously wanting in discretion, to go alone and unattended on a principal thoroughfare in a busy city, is such negligence as will preclude a recovery. Nothing can be plainer than that the plaintiffs cannot claim that they were without fault. The allowing of an infant of such tender years to go on the streets or open highways, amidst the many dangers to which she was exposed, without any one in attendance to afford her adequate protection, betrayed culpable carelessness and inattention. But we are not to apply the same rigid rule in determining what will be [490]*490a bar to the maintenance of an action on the grounds of contributory negligence to an infant, an idiot, or a person non compos mentis, that we would to one who had arrived at the age to possess ordinary judgment and discretion.

All that is necessary to give a right of action to the plaintiff for an injury inflicted by the negligence of the defendant, is, that he should have exercised care and prudence equal to his capacity. It would be palpably unjust to require of a child of small capacity and little discretion the same precaution and prudence which might reasonably be expected of a person of elder years. If, therefore, any one using dangerous instruments, running machinery, or employing vehicles which are peculiarly hazardous, and he know that infants, idiots, or others who are bereft of, or have but imperfect discretion, are in close or immediate proximity, he will be compelled to the exercise of a degree of caution, skill and diligence, which would not be required in case of other persons.

It is true, Judge Cowen, in Hartfield v. Roper (21 Wend. 615), makes no distinction between the responsibility of infants and those who have grown up to years of discretion ; and he there held, that although a child, by reason of his tender age, be incapable of using that ordinary care which is required of a discreet and prudent person, yet the want of such care on the part of the parent or guardians of the child furnish the same answer to an action by the child, as would its omission on the part of the plaintiff in an action by an adult.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Mo. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-missouri-railroad-mo-1865.