Fox v. Harding

6 Pa. D. & C.2d 785, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 421
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedNovember 16, 1955
Docketno. 166
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C.2d 785 (Fox v. Harding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Harding, 6 Pa. D. & C.2d 785, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 421 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Bretherick, J.,

This is an action in trespass against a minor and her parents to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly sus[786]*786tained by plaintiff as a result of defendants’ negligence. The case is before us on preliminary objections by way of demurrer to the complaint.

The complaint avers that defendants, James T. Harding and Mary Harding, are residents of the Borough of Lansdowne, and are the parents and natural guardians of defendant, Ellen Harding, a minor who is upwards of seven years of age; that during the month of April, 1954, the parent defendants purchased a bicycle for the minor defendant, and thereafter, with the knowledge of the parent defendants, the minor defendant customarily operated her bicycle on the public sidewalks of the Borough of Lansdowne.

Plaintiff further avers that on April 26, 1954, she was walking on a public sidewalk in the Borough of Lansdowne, when the minor defendant, while operating her bicycle, negligently ran into and struck plaintiff from the rear, knocking plaintiff to the ground and causing the injuries specifically set forth in the complaint.

The complaint avers that the minor defendant’s negligence consisted of operating a bicycle on a public sidewalk in violation of the ordinance of the Borough of Lansdowne, negligently and carelessly operating a bicycle without due regard to the rights of plaintiff as a pedestrian, negligently and carelessly failing to observe the position of plaintiff and to avoid striking her.

Paragraph 6 of the complaint avers that the parent defendants were negligent “in that they had full knowledge of the fact that their minor daughter, Ellen Harding, was operating her said bicycle on the public sidewalks of the said Borough of Lansdowne in violation of a Borough Ordinance, and that they permitted their daughter to continue to operate the said bicycle with full knowledge that their minor daughter had [787]*787neither the experience nor knowledge to safely operate and control said vehicle, and that the operation of the vehicle constituted a menace and hazard to the plaintiff and other pedestrians lawfully using said sidewalks”.

The parent defendants assert that the complaint fails to set forth a cause of action in that it does not contain any averments by which they may be charged with negligence which was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. We are forced to disagree.

In Condel v. Savo, 350 Pa. 350, it is said at page 352:

“At common law the mere relation of parent and child imposes upon the parent no liability for the torts of the child, but the parents may be liable where the act of the child is done as the agent of the parents or where the negligence of the parents makes the injury possible. The injury committed by the child must have been the natural and probable consequence of the parents’ negligent act, that is, a consequence which, under the surrounding circumstances, might and ought reasonably to have been foreseen as likely to flow from such negligent act”. (Italics supplied.)

We think the facts pleaded in the complaint bring the case fairly within the principle stated in Restatement of the Law of Torts §308:

“It is negligence to permit a third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which is under the control of the actor, if the actor knows or should know that such person intends or is likely to use the thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others.”

In comment b thereunder, it is said:

“The rule stated in this Section has its most frequent application where the third person is a member of a class which is notoriously likely to misuse the thing [788]*788which the actor permits him to use. Thus, it is negligent to place loaded firearms or poisons within reach of young children or feeble-minded adults.”

The parent defendants, in their very scholarly brief of argument, deny the applicability of the rule in the facts here presented. They contend that the rule has its principal application in cases involving weapons and other dangerous instrumentalities, and argue that a bicycle “can hardly be classified as a dangerous instrumentality, and, certainly, does not fall in the same category with rifles, guns and ammunition.” We think defendants take too narrow a view of the rule, and of the scope of its application. It is probably true that the principle has found its most frequent application in cases involving weapons and other inherently dangerous instrumentalities. But the rule has often been applied in situations involving motor vehicles, as a review of the digests will show. One does not ordinarily think of an automobile as a dangerous instrumentality, although it can become such by the manner of its use. The same can be said of a bicycle. The difference is altogether one of degree, as most distinctions in the law are said to be. We can see no reason in law or logic for denying the applicability of the principle in question to any instrumentality reasonably susceptible of such use as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others.

For present purposes, it must be accepted as a fact that the parent defendants permitted the minor defendant to operate a bicycle with full knowledge, among other things, that their daughter customarily operated the bicycle on the public sidewalks. Whether the operation of a bicycle in the manner indicated created an unreasonable risk of harm to others, is, in our opinion, a question of fact for a jury and not a matter of law for the court.

[789]*789It is especially to be noted, in this connection, that the operation of a bicycle on the public sidewalks was prohibited by ordinance. The purpose of the ordinance is obvious. We call attention to the general rule that the violation of a legislative enactment is, at least, evidence of negligence, and may be negligence per se: Jinks v. Currie, 324 Pa. 532; Laubach v. Colley, 283 Pa. 366; Restatement of the Law of Torts, §286.

It is our opinion, contrary to defendants’ view, that McBride v. Aaronson, 70 D. & C. 391, is directly in point. It was there held that (syllabus):

“A parent who allows a three-year-old child to operate a tricycle in and out of his store and on the sidewalk in front thereof, where people congregate whose attention to the possibility of danger is likely to be diverted through the display of merchandise . . . and permits it to continue, is guilty of negligence toward a person who is injured by stepping backward into the tricycle while looking in the window, and is liable for damages so sustained.”

The court ruled that the case fell within the principle of section 308 of the Restatement of the Law of Torts. Defendants argue that, in the McBride case, the “risk of harm to others was forseeable,” because of the likely diversion of attention ■ through the display of merchandise. It appears to us, however, that risk of harm to others is forseeable from the very nature of the act itself. Clear recognition of this seems implicit in the prohibition contained in the ordinance. At any rate, the question is at least one for a jury.

We come now to a novel question in the case. It is contended on behalf of the minor defendant that a child of seven years, under the facts averred in the complaint, cannot be said to have been negligent.

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Related

Jinks v. Currie
188 A. 356 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Laubach v. Colley
129 A. 88 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Condel v. Savo
39 A.2d 51 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C.2d 785, 1955 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-harding-pactcompldelawa-1955.