Caleb Lash v. Richard Cutts

943 F.2d 147, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20873, 1991 WL 169286
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 1991
Docket90-1743
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 943 F.2d 147 (Caleb Lash v. Richard Cutts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caleb Lash v. Richard Cutts, 943 F.2d 147, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20873, 1991 WL 169286 (1st Cir. 1991).

Opinion

CYR, Circuit Judge.

On the morning of June 1, 1986, five-year-old Caleb Lash asked his mother if he could accompany a neighbor’s son to a school playground located two house lots from the Lash residence in Waldoboro, Maine. Caleb previously had not been allowed to leave home except under the supervision of an older family member. Mrs. Lash later received a telephone call from the neighbor, informing her that Caleb was not at the playground but was visiting at the neighbor’s house. Caleb was seriously injured when he rode his tricycle down the steep driveway leading from the neighbor’s house into the public road, where he was struck by a vehicle driven by Richard Cutts.

Caleb and his mother filed a diversity action in the United States District Court for the District of Maine, demanding damages against Cutts, a Vermont resident, for negligence and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Cutts answered, pleading comparative negligence on the part of Caleb and his mother as an affirmative defense and interposing a counterclaim for contribution against Mrs. Lash for alleged negligent supervision of Caleb. At trial, plaintiffs introduced evidence that the Cutts vehicle had been travelling in excess of the posted speed limit at the time of the collision. Cutts sought to establish that Caleb had violated a motor vehicle regulation requiring that a vehicle exiting from a driveway yield to a vehicle travelling on a primary road.

*149 Although the jury determined that all parties were negligent, Cutts successfully established that Mrs. Lash had been negligent in failing to supervise Caleb, that her negligence should be imputed to Caleb, and that the combined negligence of Mrs. Lash and Caleb exceeded the negligence of Cutts, thereby precluding any recovery by Caleb. Plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial, on the ground that the jury charge misstated applicable Maine law in two material respects. The district court denied the motion for new trial, and plaintiffs appealed.

I

DISCUSSION

A. Imputation of Parental Negligence to a Child

The plaintiffs challenge the following jury instruction as a misstatement of Maine law on the imputation of parental negligence to a child:

[A] parent has a duty to exercise reasonable care to supervise his or her child. A parent also has a duty to maintain his or her child’s bicycle. As I have already explained, these duties are based on what would be expected of a reasonable person under the circumstances.
Thus, if a parent is negligent in failing to supervise his or her child, or maintain his or her child’s bicycle, then the negligence of the parent may be imputed to the child and may reduce the child’s recovery against the defendant.

We will affirm the district court judgment unless we determine that the challenged instruction, to which timely objection was taken pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 51, misstated applicable Maine law and that a correct instruction would have resulted in a different outcome. See Elwood v. Pina, 815 F.2d 173, 177 (1st Cir.1987).

At common law, the imputation of parental contributory negligence to an injured child was based on the theory that the special parent-child relationship amounted to an agency, requiring reasonable parental control over the actions of the child. See W. Page Keeton, et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 74, at 530-32 (5th ed. 1984). Although in some circumstances both parent and child could be found contributorily negligent at common law, see, e.g., Cadman v. White, 296 Mass. 117, 5 N.E.2d 19 (1936), as plaintiffs analyze Day v. Cunningham, 125 Me. 328, 133 A. 855 (1926), and Orr v. First National Stores, Inc., 280 A.2d 785 (1971), Maine law no longer permits a finding that both Caleb and his mother were negligent.

Day was a negligence action brought in behalf of an eight-year-old girl against a motorist whose vehicle struck the girl as she crossed a public street while accompanied by her mother. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the judgment for the plaintiff child, the Maine Law Court discussed the doctrine of imputed contributory negligence:

If the plaintiff had been a child of very tender years incapable of exercising any degree of care, the doctrine of imputed negligence would apply.... We hold that it also applies in case of children old enough and of sufficient intelligence to exercise some degree of care, if such children are accompanied by a parent who directs their movements.

Day, 125 Me. at 332, 133 A. at 857 (emphasis added).

The plaintiffs assert that imputation of parental negligence is impermissible under Maine law except in the particular circumstances delineated in Day. Thus, as Caleb was not “accompanied” by his mother at the time he was injured, cf. Orr, 280 A.2d at 788, plaintiffs argue that the district court was required to instruct the jury that Mrs. Lash’s negligence could only be imputed to Caleb if Caleb was too young to exercise any degree of care for his own safety. 1

*150 Maine decisional law evaluates the contributory negligence of the child and the negligence of the parent under related but distinct criteria. The conduct of the child is gauged against the objective standard of care reasonably expected of children of similar age and intelligence confronted with a similar risk of harm, without regard to the particular capacity of the individual child to exercise care for his own safety. See Orr, 280 A.2d at 796. The jury determination as to the reasonableness of parental supervision takes into account, inter alia, what a reasonable parent knows or should know about her own child's capacity to exercise care for his own safety in the particular circumstances. See Grant v. Bangor Ry. & Elec. Co., 109 Me. 133, 138-39, 83 A. 121, 123 (1912). The analysis propounded by plaintiffs on appeal blurs this important distinction.

Under Maine law, "[t]he standard of age at which a child is chargeable with parental negligence cannot be absolutely fixed, although within certain limits it may be approximately determined." Grant, 109 Me. at 137-188, 83 A. at 123. A very young child may be determined inherently incapable of negligence in his own right, as a matter of law, leaving for jury determination only the alleged negligence of the parent in supervising the child. See, e.g., Gravel v. LeBlanc, 131 Me. 325, 329-330, 162 A. 789, 791 (1932) (child under four years of age considered non sui juris and "not capable of exercising care for his own safety"); Morgan v. Aroostook Valley R.R. Co., 115 Me. 171, 174, 98 A.

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943 F.2d 147, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 20873, 1991 WL 169286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caleb-lash-v-richard-cutts-ca1-1991.