Schmidt v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

23 Wis. 186
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 23 Wis. 186 (Schmidt v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) 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
Schmidt v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 23 Wis. 186 (Wis. 1868).

Opinion

Cole, J.

The jury must have found, under the instructions of the court, that the parents of the child were free from fault or negligence in allowing the infant to stray upon the railroad track. For the court specifically instructed the 'jury, that if they found from the evidence that the injury to the plaintiff was caused by the neglect of the defendant or its agents, while the parents of the plaintiff were in the exercise of ordinary care in guarding the plaintiff, then they should find for the plaintiff. The same proposition is substantially embraced in other parts of the charge — that if the negligence of the parents, or of those whose duty it was to watch the infant, contributed to produce the injury, no recovery could be had. The jury were told that they must consider all the circumstances appearing in the evidence, in order to determine whether the parents had exercised ordinary care in guarding the child, or not; and this was undoubtedly correct. As was forcibly argued by the counsel for the plaintiff, in determining this question of negligence, the condition of the family, the season of the year, the place of the accident, the probability that it would happen, and all [189]*189the surrounding facts and circumstances, were proper matters to be considered by the jury; and they must have found from the whole evidence that the parents were free from fault or negligence.

Then, we think the ruling of the court below correct upon another proposition, which has been very elaborately discussed by counsel, that is, whether an infant of only eighteen months old must be judged by the same rule as an adult, when exposing himself to danger. In denying the motion for a nonsuit, the court evidently was of the opinion that negligence could not be predicated upon the conduct of an infant of that age. But the counsel for the company insists that this is an erroneous view of the law, and that the correct rule upon the subject is, when an infant brings suit for injuries received, that he is bound to show himself free from all negligence, or want of proper care, tending to produce the injury, the same as an adult. He argues and claims that all plaintiffs suing for such injuries stand upon the same ground, and are subjected to the same rules; and that, so far as the right of recovery is concerned, whatever would be negligence or want of proper care in an adult, is negligence or want of proper care in an infant. We are not prepared to yield our assent to the soundness of such a proposition, even though cases may be found which seem to sustain it. An infant of the age of eighteen months is utterly incapable of exercising any care or discretion in any matter whatever. He is incapable of comprehending the imminent danger of remaining on a railroad track when a train of cars is approaching. He is necessarily incapable of exercising any judgment or forethought, can neither apprehend the danger to which he is exposed, nor take suitable means to protect himself against it. Negligence cannot properly be imputed to him, since he knows nothing of care, or diligence, or danger. And to say that he is bound to the same legal rules in regard to the exercise of care and diligence in avoiding danger, and [190]*190escaping the consequences of neglect on the part of others, which are applied to persons of full age and capacity, seems to us a most unreasonable doctrine. Reason, principle and the weight of authority, we think, sanction a different rule. Most of these cases where this question is discussed, are cited on the brief of the counsel for the plaintiff; and we are content to refer to the reasonings in those cases upon the point we are considering. They fully vindicate both the soundness and humanity of the doctrine, that negligence cannot be imputed to the conduct of an infant of such tender years as the plaintiff, and that in respect to his acts he is not to be judged by the same rules which are applied to an adult. All that is demanded in such cases is, a degree of care or diligence equal to the capacity of the child. In addition to the authorities cited by counsel upon this point, see Whirley v. Whiteman, 1 Head (Tenn.) 610; and Angelí on Highways, § 347. And this brings us to the point in the case which presents the greatest difficulty.

The child was, in the month of August, 1865, run over by a gravel train of the defendant, and lost his right arm in consequence of the injury so received. The railroad track ran across the farm of the plaintiff’s father, some forty or forty-five rods from the dwelling-house. The road had been in operation a year or more, but the company had neglected to construct any fences along the line of its road at that point. The child was on the track where a path, leading from one part of his father’s farm to the other, crossed the railroad. The plaintiff requested the court to give a number- of special instructions, the fourth, fifth and sixth of which were as follows:

Fourth. The defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to fence its road across the land in question.
“Fifth. If the jury find from the evidence that the want of a fence was the cause of the injury, without negligence of plaintiff’s parents contributing thereto, they must find for the plaintiff.
[191]*191“ Sixth. If tbe jury find from tbe evidence, that, owing to the want of a fence, this part of tbe road over tbe land in question was unsafe, and accidents more liable to occur there than where the road was fenced, and that tbe company bad notice of this fact, then it was tbe duty of tbe defendant to use more than ordinary care and diligence to prevent such accidents, and to run their trains with reference to this consideration.”

These instructions the court gave, under exceptions, and also gave, at the request of the defendant, this instruction: “ That the plaintiff cannot recover for the negligence of the defendant in not building said fence, unless you find that the injury happened without the fault of the plaintiff and in con-consequence of the neglect to build the fence, and that the fence would have prevented it.”

Now, considering these various instructions together, so far as they bear upon the question of the liability of the company arising from the fact that it had neglected to build a fence along the road at that place, they simply amount to this proposition : That though the defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to fence its road across the land in question, yet this fact would not authorize a recovery, unless the injury happened without the fault of the plaintiff’s parents contributing thereto, and in consequence of the neglect to build the fence, and the fence would have prevented the accident.

Assuming, then, these facts to exist, as we must after the verdict — that the parents exercised ordinary care in protecting the child; that the company neglected to build a fence along its road at that place, as the law required; and that the child was injured in consequence of this neglect, the question arises, In such a case is not the company liable ? The counsel for the company says that the failure to build a fence subjected the defendant to certain liabilities in case of an injury to cattle, horses, or other domestic animals; and that in case of injury [192]*192to passengers, happening in. consequence of not fencing the road, certain other liabilities would attach; but that fences were never intended to keep men, women or children off the track, and are utterly useless for any such purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Wis. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-wis-1868.