Page v. Murphy

261 N.W. 443, 194 Minn. 607, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1045
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1935
DocketNo. 30,354.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 443 (Page v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Murphy, 261 N.W. 443, 194 Minn. 607, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1045 (Mich. 1935).

Opinions

Julius J. Olson, J ustice.

Defendant Harry A. Murphy appeals from an order denying his alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding or a new trial.

Action was brought to recover damages under the death by wrongful act statute by the executors of the estate of Rebecca Corliss Kinney.' Plaintiffs prevailed as against Mr. Murphy, but the action against his wife was not pressed, so the verdict Avas rendered against him only.

Defendants’ home is a neAV, modern, and commodious structure. A blueprint of the first floor (and that is the only one with which Ave are concerned) is attached to the record. From this it appears that as one enters the. building there is a front center hall Avith the living room to the right and dining room to the left thereof. To the rear of the hall mentioned is what is termed in the record the back hall, ten feet square. Within this space and in the corner opposite the basement stairway is an inclosed lavatory. The back hall is lighted by a fixture about in the center of the ceiling, and there is also a similar light in the ceiling of the lavatory. The lavatory door opens outAvardly, and a short distance in front thereof is an arched opening to the basement stairway built of cement and covered with a rubber corrugated pad. There is no claim of any structural defect or lack of adequate lights.

On October 31, 1929, Mrs. Kinney, grandmother of defendant’s Avife, Avas visiting at his home. She came there during the forenoon, had lunch at noon, and visited Avith the family, including one *609 Mrs. Frazee, Mrs. Murphy’s mother. She was invited to remain with the family and to partake with them of the evening meal. Defendants’ four children, ranging in age from four to twelve years, and some children of neighbors, had been shooting beans all around the house and had been running in and out, as children do, especially on an occasion such as this, being the night of Halloween. The day had been Avet, the Aveather .drizzly. In the back hall it seems that the children, because they had been running in and out of the house, had caused the rubber tile floor to become Avet. Here too is the place Avhere the children had been most energetic in “shooting-beans.” Defendant Harry Murphy came to the house about five o’clock in the afternoon. He, his wife, and the grandmother gathered in the living room. When dinner was announced defendant went to the lavatory adjacent to the back hall to wash his hands and did so. The grandmother intended to go to the lavatory upstairs for the same purpose, but Mrs. Murphy suggested that this Avas not necessary and that the lavatory on the first floor could be used. She conditcted the old lady thereto and turned on the light. As the- old lady came out of the lavatory to join the family, she slipped at or near the basement stairway and fell to the basement floor beloAv, receiving injuries from which she later died. Mrs. Murphy .testified that when she and her husband ran doAvnstairs to Avhere the old lady was lying she said she had slipped on the beans. She was a woman past 80 years of age. but possessed of an exceptionally alert mind and had all the mental and physical faculties that one much younger than she Avould be glad to have.

A number of assignments of error are presented for review. We shall consider but one, Avhether defendant failed' to exercise the degree of care which persons of ordinary prudence usually exercise under the same or similar circumstances. The court submitted to the jury as a fact issue Avhether defendant in permitting the rear hall tc^ become Avet and strewn Avith beans and not warning the old lady of this condition had failed to exercise the care of the ordinarily prudent person. It Avas and is urged in behalf of plaintiffs that because the grandmother had reached the age of 80 years *610 and because defendant knew that the children had been shooting-beans and had been running in and out of the house so as to make the back hall wet and slippery, that thereby defendant “permitted a dangerous condition to be created on his premises” and that he was negligent in failing to warn her of the “danger which he knew lurked in that hack hall.” (The words in italics are taken from the court’s charge.) Counsel for plaintiffs adroitly and ingeniously argue that while a father is not liable for his children’s torts “without some direct or indirect participation on his part,” he is nevertheless “bound to use all reasonable effort to restrain them from conduct that imperils others when he knows what they are doing.” And, further, “that liability may arise through failure to restrain children from the pursuit of any acts dangerous to others and known to the parent.”

We have no quarrel with the cases to which counsel refer (Hoverson v. Noker, 60 Wis. 511, 19 N. W. 382, 50 Am. R. 381, and Ryley v. Lafferty (D. C.) 45 F. (2d) 641, 642), but the trouble is that the facts in those cases are not at all similar to those presented here. Thus we find that in the Ho verson case [60 Wis. 513] “the father permitted his young sons to shout, use abusive language, and discharge firearms at persons who were passing along the highway in front of his house,” thereby frightening plaintiffs’ horses while driving to church and causing- them to become unmanageable so “that they jumped suddenly forward and threw Sarah Hoverson out of the seat and injured her.” Upon these facts the court properly came to the conclusion that [60 Wis. 514]: “If a parent permits his very young children to become a source of damage to those who pass the highway in front of his house, he is as much liable for the injury as though he permitted them to erect some frightful or dangerous object near the highway which would frighten passing teams; and in such case he cannot screen himself by saying that he did not in words order the erection to be made.”

In the Ryley case [45 F. (2d) 641, 642] the court said (regarding the liability of parents for the torts of their minor son whom they knew to be habitually guilty of “inveigling smaller boys into secluded places and there beating, maiming, and punishing them; that *611 defendant parents at time in question knew of such vicious habit and disposition; * * * that defendant father encouraged his son in such conduct * ®”) : “Under such circumstances as alleged the child’s tort was committed with the parents’ knowledge and implied acquiescence, and such knowledge and consent may be expressed or implied, rendering the parents liable without proof of their actual knowledge of the tort sued upon. Having full knowledge of their child’s habits, traits, and vicious disposition, and encouraging him in the manner charged to continue such acts, would constitute assent and participation on the part of the parents in the tort alleged, and, if so, it would be regarded as negligence upon the parents’ part.”

The bean shooters here employed cannot be classed as instru-mentalities likely to imperil others, nor does it seem to us that these little children by blowing beans through a tube can be said to have engaged in “acts dangerous to others.” We think this thoroughly capable and energetic old lady would have resented a rule of liability such as now sought to be enforced by her executors. She came to defendants’ home to enjoy her granddaughter’s company and that of her great grandchildren.

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Page v. Murphy
261 N.W. 443 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 443, 194 Minn. 607, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-murphy-minn-1935.