Conway v. Monidah Trust

157 P. 178, 52 Mont. 244, 1916 Mont. LEXIS 45
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1916
DocketNo. 3,635
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 157 P. 178 (Conway v. Monidah Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conway v. Monidah Trust, 157 P. 178, 52 Mont. 244, 1916 Mont. LEXIS 45 (Mo. 1916).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the evening of July 19, 1911, Joseph F. Conway, Jr., age seven, and his sister, age six, by consent of their parents, were taken by Wm. Maddock on to the Tzarena mining claim, owned by the Monidah Trust and located near the limits of the city of Butte. While on the claim, Joseph F. Conway, Jr., fell into an unguarded shaft and was injured. The facts of the case are detailed at length in Conway v. Monidah, Trust, 47 Mont. 269, L. R. A. 1915E, 500, 132 Pac. 26, and 51 Mont. 113, 149 Pac. 711—the ease in which the child recovered damages for his own injuries. In this action the father seeks damages for the loss which he (the father) sustained by reason of the diminished earning capacity of the boy from the date of the injury until he should reach the age of twenty-one.

Upon the trial Maddock, the custodian of the child at the time of the accident, testified as a witness for the plaintiff. On [248]*248cross-examination lie said: “I was familiar with that ground before I went out there, for three or four years. I walked ahead of the children about twenty feet or so; I couldn’t exactly tell you right now. I knew that the shafts were there and open prior to that time. T went up and sat on the ledge of rocks and let the children play around picking flowers. I called to them to come up; my back was turned to them. The two of them was coming up at this time. They had been playing around there two or three minutes before I called to them. They were there for sufficiently long period of time to permit me to go up and sit upon the ledge of rocks and take out my pipe. I filled my pipe and lit it, and while I sat down for a smoke, I observed the train coming along, and at that moment I called for the children to come up. The children were down around these shafts during all the time it took me to do these things. They were about twenty feet or less than twenty feet north of this shaft when I.called them. Of course, I didn’t think they would run near the shaft. If I did, I wouldn’t have brought them there at all. I never gave it a thought. I certainly knew the shafts were there. I walked all over that place several times, but was not giving it a thought at the time. My mind was absorbed for the time being in the Chicago & Milwaukee railroad train coming in, and I didn’t give a thought to the danger that the children might encounter around these shafts. * * * I remember at the last trial that the boy testified that he was picking flowers, and that he made a run to get a flower on the other side of the shaft, and that he wasn’t running up there to see me at all. * # * If he had observed where he was going, he would have seen and avoided the shaft. I knew that he was standing near the northeast corner of the shaft at the time I called to him. The shaft lay between me and the boy at the time I called for him; it was pretty near in line north; in a direct line between myself and the boy. He. was a little shade to the east, and if he attempted to come directly to me, without going around the shaft, he would be in danger of running into the shaft. I knew that at the time I called him, but didn’t give [249]*249it a thought; didn’t think anything about the shaft. At the time I went there and left the boy around the shaft, I had complete knowledge of all these shafts being open and exposed there, and I certainly knew of the danger that the children might encounter with reference to falling down these shafts, but never did think anything about it. I wouldn’t have gone there if I thought that.”

The same witness further testified in answer to direct and leading questions by plaintiff’s counsel, as follows:

“Q. Did you ever see anybody else up in that vicinity—children, men and women, and so forth ?
“A. Oh, yes; there have been three or four go out Sundays and sit around there.
“Q. Men, women and children?
“A. Yes, sir. I see where they were picnicking—used to have fires out there or something. . * * *
“Q. You frequently saw other people—other parents and other children—there, doing just as you did with those children on that occasion, did you not, prior to this time and while those shafts were exposed and uncovered?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Well, Mr. Maddoek, did you ever see children playing, holding picnics, and building fires, and getting their dinners in the same place you and the children of Joseph F. Conway, the plaintiff here, were at that time?
“A. Well, I have seen children and grown-up people there. I see the places where they had made fires and built fires, but did not see them at times that I have been along.”

The boy testified that he was running to pick a flower when he fell into the shaft; that he did not know of the existence of any shaft there, and was not warned by his father or Maddoek.

At the conclusion of all the testimony the defendants moved for a directed verdict, upon the ground that the evidence disclosed ■ contributory negligence which barred recovery. The motion was denied, and upon submission of the cause the court instructed the jury: “It is the duty of the father of an infant [250]*250child to use ordinary care and precaution to keep his child from places of danger, and if this duty has been delegated to others the father must assume responsibility for reasonable care on their part, and in this regard you are instructed that if you find from the evidence in this case that William Maddock, who had the custody of plaintiff’s child at the time of the accident complained of, did not exercise ordinary care and prudence to protect said child from injury, then the negligence of such custodian, if any, is attributable to the father, and your verdict in such event must be in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. ’ ’

From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and from an order denying them a new trial, defendants appealed.

“The rule is well established that no cause should ever be [1] withdrawn from the jury unless the conclusion from the facts necessarily follows, as a matter of law, that no recovery could be had upon any view which could reasonably be drawn from the facts which the evidence tends to establish.” (Nord v. Boston & Mont. C. C. & S. Min. Co., 30 Mont. 48, 75 Pac. 681.) But, except in cases of libel and slander, juries are the triers of facts only, and not the judges of the law; and where [2] the facts are undisputed, and are such that reasonable men can draw but one conclusion from them, the only questions presented for decision are questions of law, and to that extent the case presents in effect an agreed statement of facts. (Helena Nat. Bank v. Rocky Mt. Tel. Co., 20 Mont. 379, 63 Am. St. Rep. 628, 51 Pac. 829.)

In Harrington v. Butte, A. & Pac. Ry. Co., 37 Mont. 169, 16 L. R. A. (n. s.) 395, 95 Pac. 8, we considered at great length [3] the question presented, and announced the rule that the unexplained, presence of a child non sui juris, unattended in a place of known danger, makes out a prima facie ease of negligence on the part of the child’s parents. That doctrine has never been modified or departed from.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P. 178, 52 Mont. 244, 1916 Mont. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-monidah-trust-mont-1916.