Warren v. Manchester Street Railway

47 A. 735, 70 N.H. 352
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 47 A. 735 (Warren v. Manchester Street Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Manchester Street Railway, 47 A. 735, 70 N.H. 352 (N.H. 1900).

Opinion

Pike, J.

The defendants’ exceptions to the court’s refusals to permit the father to testify whether he allowed his child to go out unattended, and to instruct the jury that if the child strayed into the street in consequence of the parents’ negligence, and this negligence contributed to cause the injury, the plaintiff could not recover, raise the questions (1) whether a parent’s negligence is imputable to his child, and (2) whether the father of the intestate is the real plaintiff in this action.

*358 Had the negligence relied upon been that of the motor-man solely, it would be unnecessary to consider these questions; for in that event the father’s negligence must have been oifly a remote-cause oí the injury, and therefore would be immaterial to the plaintiff’s right to recover. The effect of this negligence would have been, only to allow the child to be in a dangerous situation. The father’s absence would have rendered it impossible for him to avoid the ikjury at the time. “ He who cannot prevent an injury negligently inflicted upon Iris person'or property by an intelligent agent ‘ present and acting at the time ’ ... is legally without fault, and it is immaterial whether his inability results from his absence, previous negligence, or other cause.” Nashua Iron and Steel Co. v. Railroad, 62 N. H. 159, 163; Felch v. Railroad, 66 N. H. 318; Brember v. Jones, 67 N. H. 374, 376, 377; Brown v. Savings Bank, 67 N. H. 549, 551; Chickering v. Lord, 67 N. H. 555, 557; Edgerly v. Railroad, 67 N. H. 312, 314, 315, 317. The question for the jury would have been whether or not the defendants by the exercise of ordinary care could have prevented the injury ; if they could not, they would have been without fault and not liable; if they could, they would have been “ liable whether the intestate was in the street by reason of, or without, his parents’ negligence. ' In cases of this character, where an irresponsible child is, . . . by the negligence of the parent, . . . exposed to peril without an attendant, . . . the question of contributory, negligence is not involved.” Bisaillon v. Blood, 64 N. H. 565, 566.

There was, however, other evidence of the defendants’ negligence in their failure to provide a fender for the car. If they had provided one, the intestate might not have been injured. This negligence was due to nomaction of the defendants at some-previous time. It was negligence that occurred in the past, the. effect of which the defendants could not avoid at the moment of the accident by the exercise of ordinary care. If, therefore, the father’s negligence is imputable to the child, or the father is the real plaintiff, his negligence in allowing the child to stray upon the track was material if it contributed to the injury. Nashua Iron and Steel Co. v. Railroad, 62 N. H. 159, 165.

The question whether a parent’s negligence can be imputed to-his child, so as to bar a recovery by the child against a third person, has been considered by the courts of many states, and conflicting conclusions have been reached. The question first arose in Hartfield v. Roper, 21 Wend. 615, where it was decided in the affirmative. The court said: “An infant is not sui juris. He belongs to another, to whom discretion in the care of his person is exclusively confided. That-person is keeper and agent for this. *359 purpose : and in respect to third persons, liis act must be deemed that of the infant; his neglect, the infant’s neglect.” This rule was questioned in Vermont soon after its announcement, and has been rejected quite generally elsewhere. In Robinson v. Cone, 22 Vt. 213, 224, Redfield, J., said: “We are satisfied, that although a child, or idiot, or lunatic may to some extent have escaped into the highway through the fault or negligence of his keeper, and so be improperly there, yet if he is hurt by the negligence of the defendant, he is not precluded from his redress.” In Smith v. O’Connor, 48 Pa. St. 218, 221, the court said: “ We are asked to approve and apply the doctrine held by the New York courts, and first enunciated in Hartfield v. Roper, 21 Wend. 615. There it is: ruled that the negligence or imprudence of the parents or guardians in allowing a child of tender age to be exposed to injury in a highway furnishes the same answer to an action by the child as, the negligence or other fault of an adult plaintiff would in a similar case. The negligence of the parents or guardians is imputed to the child, and hence, unless the infant plaintiff has exercised that care and prudence which are demanded of an adult, unless, equally guiltless of any negligence conctirring with a wrongful act of a defendant in causing an injury, no action can be sustained. This is compelling the child to the exercise, not of its own, but of its parents’ discretion. It is holding it responsible for the ordinary care of adults. In our opinion, the rule thus broadly stated: does not rest upon sound reason.” In Bellefontaine etc. R. R. v. Snyder, 18 Ohio St. 399, 409, it was said: “ It is the old doctrine of the father eating grapes, and the child’s teeth being set on edge. The stronge objection to it is its palpable injustice to the infant. Can it be true, and is such the law, that if only one party offends against an infant he has his action, but that if two offend against liim their faults neutralize each other, and he is without remedy ? ” In Newman v. Railroad, 52 N. J. Law 446, 449, 450, Beasley, C. L, said: “This doctrine of the imputability of the misfeasance of the keeper of a child to the child itself Is, deemed to be a pure interpolation into the law, for until the case under criticism it was absolutely unknown ; nor is it sustained by legal analogies. Infants have always been the particular objects of the favor and protection of the law. In the language of an ancient authority this doctrine is thus expressed: ‘ The common principle is that an infant in all things which sound in his benefit, shall have favor and preferment in law as well as another man„ but shall not be prejudiced by anything in his disadvantage.’ 9 Vin. Abr. 3T4. And it would appear to be plain that nothing could be more to the prejudice of an infant than to convert, by construction of law, the connection between himself and his cus *360 todian into an agency to which the harsh rule of respondeat superior should be applicable. The answerableness of the principal &r the authorized acts of his agent is not so much the dictate of natural justice as of public policy, and has arisen, with some propriety, from the circumstances that the • creation of the agency is a voluntary act, and that it can be controlled and ended at the will of its creator. But in the relationship between the infant and its keeper all these decisive characteristics are wholly wanting.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A. 735, 70 N.H. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-manchester-street-railway-nh-1900.