Mautino v. Piercedale Supply Co.

13 A.2d 51, 338 Pa. 435, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 538
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 20, 1940
DocketAppeals, 85 and 86
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 13 A.2d 51 (Mautino v. Piercedale Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mautino v. Piercedale Supply Co., 13 A.2d 51, 338 Pa. 435, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 538 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Patterson,

John Mautino, a minor, his mother, Catherine Ghéa and his step-father, Dalmiro Ghea, appellees, instituted an action -in trespass against the appellant, Piercedale Supply Co., whose employee, it whs alleged, sold to Gail Nix, a hoy under sixteen years of age, in violation of section 1 of the Act of Juné 10,1881, P; L. Ill, the cartridge with which he inflicted serious injury upon the minor appellee. The trial resulted in a verdict awarding the minor appellee the sum of $3,478.26 and awarding the Gheas the sum of $1,685.50, including $685.50 medical and hospital expenses. The Supply Company appeals from judgments entered in accordance with the verdict of the jury, assigning for error the refusal' by the .court below of its motions for judgment non obstante véredicto and for a new trial. ; ■ • . ■

Appellhnt concedes that the sale of any cartridge, gunpowder or other' dangerous and explosive substance to a person under sixteen years of age in violation of the Act of 1881 is negligence per se; and renders the seller liable for any. natural or-probable harmful result which might-follow in the wake of his wrongful act. The Act, this Court said in McMillen v. Steele, 275 Pa. 584, 587-588, “substitutes, for the proof necessary to show lack of capacity [under the common law principles which'would otherwise apply]; the hard and fast rule of sixteen years of age. Children under that age have been legislatively declared utterly unfit to handle firearms; The negligent act is solely referable’tó the unlawful sale !to a minor under sixteen . ; . and ¿s affecting the minor purchaser’s right of recovery or that of any one injured by him . .’ L the minor’s negligence ... is not material. The storekeeper-seller cannot escape responsibility by reason of the negligence of the boy to whom he sells.” See also Shaffer v. Mowery, 265 Pa. 300, 303; Wassel v. Ludwig, 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 341, 346; Pierson v. London, 102 Pa. Superior Ct. 176, 183. But, appellant contends that the minor appellee’s *438 injury was not a natural or probable consequence of its alleged unlawful sale.

It appears from the evidence that prior to the purchase of the cartridges the boy, Nix, had arranged with a friend for the furnishing of a gun but that boy was unable to provide it when, having procured the cartridges, Nix called upon him to perform. Thereupon Nix arranged with another boy, one Albert Bentz, to procure a gun belonging to the latter’s older brother and which had been loaned to one Rudy Valencia, whose age does not appear. Accordingly, on January 4, 1938, several days after the purchase of the cartridges, the two boys went to the Valencia home'where they procured the gun from Valencia, apparently upon the pretense that they had. been sent for the purpose of returning it to the Bentz home. Having thus procured the gun, the boys did some shooting in the open in the afternoon after which they returned the gun to the Bentz home. After dinner that same evening, between half past seven and eight o’clock, Nix went to the Bentz home, the two boys went upstairs, “took down the gun,” and discharged six bullets out of an upstairs window into and about the door of the home of the minor appellee, John Mautino, 300 to 350 feet away, one of which the jury found struck Mautinoj causing the injury for which appellant has been held liable. Appellant argues: “The mere selling of the cartridges did not affect plaintiff in any way. They were entirely passive with potentialities for injury only (sic) when used in connection with the subsequent agency of a gun . . .: Without the independent negligence of Rudy Valencia in turning over the gun, the injury to plaintiff could not have happened; and that subsequent act became the proximate cause of the injury, and eliminates all prior or remote conditions which made that injury possible.”

Appellant relies for this contention principally upon Shaffer v. Mowery, supra, wherein, at 303, appears the following: “Of course, if plaintiffs, or either of them *439 (Darbrinsky v. Penna. Co., 248 Pa. 503, 505; Johnson v. Reading City, etc., Ry. Co., 160 Pa. 647; Gress v. P. & R. Ry. Co., 228 Pa. 482, 486), expressly or negligently permitted their yonng offspring to handle deadly weapons, of such a kind, in such a manner and under such circumstances as to make a parent legally liable for any harmful result which might ensue to others (Archibald v. Jewell, 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 247; Meers v. McDowell, 110 Ky. 926, 929; Johnson v. Glidden, 11 S. D. 237, 241; Dixon v. Bell, 5 M. & S. 198, 199; Palm v. Ivorson, 117 Ill. App. 535, 536), they could not recover; for the law would view them as having so far intervened in bringing about the harmful result of which they themselves complain as to assume or be fixed with the risk thereof: Carter v. Towne, 103 Mass. 507, 508; and, see discussion in Davidson v. Nichol, 11 Allen 514, 519.”

The Shaffer case does not support appellant’s position, as analysis will show. It was there decided merely that if the parent-plaintiffs in that case were negligent, they could not recover, as a matter of law, and that the question of their negligence was for the jury in view of evidence of knowledge concerning their son’s possession and use of the gun by which the previously purchased cartridges were accidently discharged, killing another son. Applying that decision to the facts of the present case, negligence on the part of Valencia would require that he be regarded as having “so far intervened in bringing about the harmful result . . . as to assume or to be fixed with the risk thereof” in an action by him, had he, rather than a stranger to the transaction, in the position of minor appellee, sustained the injury, and his negligence would be a question for the jury. For purposes of the present case, however, whether or not Valencia’s conduct constituted negligence is immaterial, as the court below properly held.

Assuming that Valencia was negligent in delivering the unloaded gun to the boys, Nix and Bentz, it would not relieve appellant from legal responsibility for minor *440 appellee’s injury. Intervening human action, whether innocent or negligent, is not a superseding cause of harm which an actor’s conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about, if - such action ought to have been foreseen (Nelson v. Duquesne Light Co. et al., 338 Pa. 37, Restatement of Torts, Section 447). Appellant cannot be heard to say that it was not reasonably to be anticipated by it that some third person might, either prior or subsequent to the unlawful sale of- cartridges, inadvertently make possible the acquisition of that which'was obviously requisite to the discharge thereof in the customary and usual way, and thus relieve itself from all responsibility for injuries' resulting from such discharge either to the purchasing minor or an innocent third person.

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Bluebook (online)
13 A.2d 51, 338 Pa. 435, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mautino-v-piercedale-supply-co-pa-1940.