Wassel Et Ux. v. Ludwig

92 Pa. Super. 341, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 1927
DocketAppeal 33
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 92 Pa. Super. 341 (Wassel Et Ux. v. Ludwig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wassel Et Ux. v. Ludwig, 92 Pa. Super. 341, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

A daughter of the plaintiffs, Anna, aged four years and ten months, was killed on October 17, 1924, by a bullet fired from a F'lofoert rifle by Tony Klosnowski, a boy aged about fourteen years, who- at the time of the occurrence was in company with Walter Klocko, Joseph Bolsiewicz and Zigmund Pieszata, boys from thirteen to fourteen years of age. They were in an alley near the home of the plaintiffs, and the little girl was in the lot where she lived. The weapon used by Klosnowski had been bought before noon of the same day by Klocko and Bolsiewicz from the defendant at his store in Pittston. Klocko was fourteen years of age and Bolsiewicz thirteen. One of them had $3 in his possession and the other $0.50, and with this money they paid for the rifle and ammunition. They returned to Exeter where they lived and being joined by Pieszata, they used about half of the cartridges shooting at various objects along the river bank. Later they were joined by Klosnowski at or near the place where the shot was fired which killed the child. While in the alley, Klocko fired one shot at a bottle and Klosnowski, having been given possession of the rifle, fired twice, once in the air and once at a chicken, the latter shot causing the child’s death. Klocko handed the gun to Klosnowski in the presence of Bolsiewicz. ■ The boys were associates and were employed as caddies at a golf course in the vicinity. The responsibility of the defendant arose, as charged in the statement of claim, out of *343 the fact t/hat his sale of the rifle and ammunition was in violation of the Act of June 10, 1881, P. L. Ill, which made it a misdemeanor to sell a deadly weapon, gun powder, or explosive substance to a person sixteen years of age, and that the use^jof^Hé^gún re-suiting in the death o£^^-dgugEter of the plaintiffs was a consequence of the unlawful sale of the weapon which ought reasonably to have been ’anticipated by the defendant. The defense presented was that the injury complained of was not the proximate result of the defendant’s act, and that he was therefore entitled to binding instructions, or judgment non stante veredicto. The case was submitted t,o the jury on the inquiry whether the defendant violated the statute by wilfully selling the rifle and cartridges, and ifjso whetherflhoi_act„comiolained ofrwas-mnafural and probablejMmseqnencp: of such violation. The law with respect to proximate and remote causes has been frequently discussed by text book writers and in adjudicated cases, and is in some instances difficult of application. A general statement on the subject is that “in order to warrant a finding that negligence, or an act not amounting to wanton wrong, is the proximate cause of the injury,' it must appear that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence or wrongful act, and that it ought to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances”: Milwaukee, etc., Ry. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469. Proximate damages are the ordi.,nary and natural results of negligence, and such as might have been expected, and the law requires a wrongdoer to anticipate what is usual or probable. The natural probability of a consequence which ought to have been seen is a matter of fact to be determined from the evidence, and every case must depend on its circumstances: Kellogg v. Chicago, Northwestern Ry. Co., 26 Wis. 224; Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Hope, *344 80 Pa. 373. The application of the rule is, not controlled simply by time or distance, bnt by Pie suceession and relation of events. The misconduct charged ~Y\dlLnotj3s considered too remote if according to the usual experfe>nea..qf_mankind the result ought to have been apprehended: Lane v. Atlantic Works, 111 Mass; 136; McDonald v. Snelling, 14 Allen 290; Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y. 396; Weick v. Lander, 75 Ill. 93,

One who engages in an act unlawful in itself is not excused although other causes may have subsequently , contributed in producing the injury. Where the circumstances or event which concurs with the original unlawful act in causing the injury might reasonably have been foreseen as likely to occur, the person responsible for such negligent act is liable for the resulting injury: Stehle v. Jaeger Auto Machine Co., 225 Pa. 348; Thomas v. Winchester, supra; Illidge v. Goodwin, 5 Car. & Payne 190; This principle was applied in Loughlin v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 240 Pa. 174. That case arose out of the following state of facts: A group of boys and girls were walking along a city street, on which was located a railroad track. Two boys in the party found two railroad torpedoes in the street. They were tin boxes about the size of a silver half-dollar, and were used to produce explosions to give notice of a train ahead on the track. The torpedoes were taken to a neighboring house where an unsuccessful attempt was made to open one of them with a knife. Afterwards they were taken into the yard where one of the young people attempted to open one of them with a hatchet, with the result that the torpedo exploded whereby several of the children were injured. The court in reversing the action of the court below granting a compulsory nonsuit held that negligence may be the proximate cause of an injury of which it is not the sole or immediate cause. Where the defendant’s negligence concurred with some other *345 event to produce the injury so that it appears that without such negligence it would not have occurred and both circumstances are closely connected with the injury in the order of events, the defendant is responsible though his negligent act was not the nearest cause in the order of time: Burrell Twp. v. Albert Uncapher et al., 117 Pa. 353; Wood v. Penna. R. R. Co., 177 Pa. 306. In Stehle v. Jaeger, supra, the court said, if the negligent act of the defendant in employing the plaintiff induced or offered opportunity for the subsequent act of the latter and if his act was of a character common to youthful indiscretion not only would causal connection be shown, but the law would refer the injury to the original wrong as its natural and probable cause notwithstanding an intervening agency between that wrong and the injury. Of the same import is Cooley on Torts 76. The case of Billman v. The Indianapolis, etc., Railroad Co., 76 Ind. 166, contains an extended discussion of this subject and sustains, the rule above stated. In Griggs v. Fleckenstein, 14 Minn. 81, the facts were that the defendant negligently left a team of horses unhitched on the street of a town. They ran away and in so doing collided with the team of another person hitched to a post on the street, whereby the latter team was frightened and ran against a horse and sleigh of the plaintiff. The court held that liability could not be avoided on the ground that the injury was not the proximate cause of the defendant’s negligence. In Addison on Torts, section 12, the general rule is said to be that whoever does any illegal or wrongful act is answerable for all consequences that ensue in the ordinary and natural course of events though those consequences be immediately and directly brought about by the intervening 'agency of others providing the intervening agents were set in motion by the primary/ wrongdoer. See also Ketterer v. Armour & Co., 200 *346 Fed. Rep. 322 and Catani v. Swift & Co., 251 Pa. 52. A case reported in 82 Ind. 426, Binford v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Pa. Super. 341, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wassel-et-ux-v-ludwig-pasuperct-1927.