Ptak v. Kuetemeyer

196 N.W. 855, 182 Wis. 357, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 30
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 N.W. 855 (Ptak v. Kuetemeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ptak v. Kuetemeyer, 196 N.W. 855, 182 Wis. 357, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 30 (Wis. 1924).

Opinions

Doerfler, J.

This case was first brought to this court by the defendant upon an appeal from an order overruling a general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint. The complaint demurred to, in substance, alleged negligence on the part of the defendant to erect and maintain reasonably safe barriers in and around the ditch and in failing to properly shore up the ditch. It clearly appeared from the complaint that at the time of the accident the infant was precipitated into the ditch by reason of the cave-in. In the opinion of this court, among other things, it was said, in substance, that the complaint raised a jury issue whether the barriers around the ditch were reasonably efficient and safe in view of the fact [362]*362that the defendant knew that children were in the habit of playing around the ditch; and also whether it was not the duty of the defendant to so shore up the ditch at night that it would be reasonably safe for children playing around it.

On the trial of the action, however, it appeared from the undisputed evidence that the accident did not happen while the child was playing around the ditch, but that the cave-in occurred while the infant was in the ditch, and the court, therefore, answered the first question in the special verdict accordingly. There was therefore presented in this case by the evidence a different situation than that which was revealed from the allegations of the complaint demurred to. No case has been decided by this court upon facts substantially identical with those presented herein and no case has been cited to our attention from other courts where a similar situation existed. The question of liability must therefore be determined and based upon general principles of negligence law.

Concordia avenue, where the accident happened, is located in the midst of a dense residential district. Numerous children had from time to time, been seen playing upon the street around this ditch. On the evening preceding the accident a large number of children were engaged in play, jumping back and forth over the ditch. The evidence also conclusively establishes the fact that the defendant and those in charge of the-construction of the ditch had knowledge that children were in the habit of playing around this -ditch. The soil in which the ditch was dug was composed of a mixture of clay and gravel. Reliable experts testified that a ditch dug in such soil, particularly in the spring of the year while the frost was being thawed out by warm weather, was liable to cave in; that there was a layer of frost about three feet down from the surface, of the thickness of about three inches; that there had been several rainfalls during the period of the construction -of the ditch, and that water appeared at the deepest point in the ditch, being an accumula[363]*363tion of rain and of the melting frost; that a ditch dug in such soil, and particularly at that time of the year, and under the conditions which then existed, required shoring after digging more than four feet in order to malee it safe for those in and about the ditch. It may also be said that the evidence is in perfect accord with what one would naturally expect under circumstances existing as above described. The potent fact, which is of vital significance in the determination of the issues involved, and the one which distinguishes this case from many others, reported in the books, is that the place of accident was a public highway. It has repeatedly been held that, while streets are dedicated primarily for the purpose of public travel, nevertheless it must be realized and recognized that children are accustomed to. use highways for the purposes of play. The rule applicable to children of immature age is different from that with respect to adults. The ditch was under construction for a period of about three days. That it constituted a great attraction for children is conclusively established by the evidence, and it would be difficult to conceive how anything would be more likely to interest and attract children than the appeal of the earth in the form of a ditch like the one in question. Day by day children watched the process of construction and stood around the ditch for that purpose. When the men left their employment the children were seen jumping over the ditch, notwithstanding the existence of the barrier. Children, as a rule, are not wise to the operation of natural laws, and such wisdom comes principally from experience and education. Children like Jerome live in an impressionistic age; their minds are plastic and constitute an ever-ready receptacle for impressions of all kinds. They live in an age of fancy and of imagination, a period of fairies and fairy-tales. They represent a bundle of undeveloped possibilities. Their curiosity leads them everywhere and into everything, and they lack the power of control which comes from experience and education. This child met his death at a time when [364]*364the great majority of children are deemed ripe for the kindergarten, where the educational system is begun with play. J eróme, prior to the accident, had never been seen about this ditch, for he was carefully guarded by the plaintiff in his home and in his home surroundings. He had not previously participated with other children in play about the ditch and therefore had no occasion to be informed by them or others of the danger connected therewith. So he came upon the scene of the accident at a period of life where construction work of this kind was novel and a curiosity. The evidence does not show that any of the other children who played around the ditch or who jumped across it had at any time made an effort to enter the ditch, but Jerome alone, from among all of these children, ventured into the ditch to satisfy his childish curiosity. We must take judicial notice of the natural and peculiar, proclivities of a child six years of age. It has all and more of the daring of a grown person without possessing the element of fear. The very existence of an incline from the south end of the ditch to its lowest point acted as an invitation and a temptation to explore the bottom of this ditch. From the evidence in the case and from the knowledge which the average adult normal human being is presumed to possess with respect to the activities of children, it must be assumed that the defendant knew or should have known that children would be liable to' enter this ditch at a time when construction work for. the day had ceased. The very fact that the wall caved in, carrying with it a very large piece of the macadam surface, speaks louder than oral testimony of the consistency of this soil at that period of the year. We cannot escape the conclusion that the defendant was negligent in failing to shore the walls. Can it be said, as a matter of law, that this unfortunate infant was contributorily negligent? We are convinced that the jury’s answer in that behalf was well sustained by the evidence. This can likewise be said of the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff. It appears that unusual [365]*365precaution was taken by him to confine his child, in consideration of his age, within premises where he would not be subjected to danger. The fact that this child escaped from the surveillance of its parents for a few minutes does not constitute negligence as a matter of law.

In Harris v. Eastern Wis. R. & L. Co. 152 Wis. 627, 140 N. W. 288, an electric light tower was constructed on a highway, and about eighteen feet from the street there was a platform which was reached by steps which were used by employees of the defendant in connection with the lighting system.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.W. 855, 182 Wis. 357, 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ptak-v-kuetemeyer-wis-1924.