Wax Ex Rel. Wax v. City of Honolulu

34 Haw. 256, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 29
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1937
DocketNo. 2335.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 Haw. 256 (Wax Ex Rel. Wax v. City of Honolulu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wax Ex Rel. Wax v. City of Honolulu, 34 Haw. 256, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 29 (haw 1937).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

The evidence of plaintiff in this case admits of the following findings of fact: Plaintiff was injured while at play in Manoa Park by a length of Hawaiian Hnme pipe which two of his companions by their own physical exertions, had dislodged and caused to roll down a decline against plaintiff; all of the children involved, including plaintiff, were from eight to nine years of age; the pipe involved in the injury was eighteen inches in diameter, eight feet long and weighed approximately 850 pounds and had been placed in the park by the servants and employees of the city and *257 county for nse in the construction by it of an underground conduit in an abutting street; the pipe, prior to its being dislodged, lay so that, if dislodged, it would normally roll down the adjoining decline in the park grounds; Manoa Park at the time was a public park admittedly “owned and controlled by the City and County of Honolulu” where children were accustomed to play and the pipe in question had been left unscotched except for some stones two or three inches in size taken from the excavation for the conduit.

There was a verdict for plaintiff. The exceptions of defendant-appellant present the following grounds for reversal: (a) That the defendant was not guilty of negligence; (b) that if negligent such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury; (c) that plaintiff was guilty of negligence directly and proximately contributing to his own injury and (d) that the court erred in instructing the jury that if they found that the defendant by its agents or servants placed in the park a piece of pipe of the length and weight which caused the injury “in such a position that * " [it] might be easily dislodged and in such position that it would normally, if dislodged, roll down a hill, and if * * * such a pipe would be normally attractive to children for purposes of play and that such fact could have been reasonably anticipated by defendant then and in such event it was the duty of Defendant in placing said pipe to use reasonable precautions so that said pipe would be reasonably safe from being easily dislodged.” It is to the words “normally attractive” and the words “easily dislodged” that the defendant particularly objects.

(a) Where a municipality owns and controls public parks there is imposed upon it the legal duty to use ordinary care to keep such parks in a reasonably safe condition for the public rightfully using the same. (43 C. J., T. Municipal Corporations, § 1936, p. 1170.) Failure to do so constitutes negligence. (City of Canon City v. Cox, 55 *258 Colo. 264, 133 Pac. 1040, 1042; Ramirez v. City of Cheyenne, 34 Wyo. 67, 241 Pac. 710, 714, 715.) And if the corporate or private functions of the municipality include the control and maintenance of public parks, the municipality is liable for a failure to observe its duty in that respect where its negligence is the proximate cause of an injury. Defendant makes no claim for exemption from liability for negligence upon the ground that the municipality in owning and controlling public parks was exercising governmental or public functions. A municipality may be guilty of a breach of its legal duty as a result of nonaction as well as of action. Moreover, nonaction to constitute a legal causation need not cause the injury in direct and natural sequence but may create a situation requiring the intervening concurrent action of another or others to produce the resulting injury. The creation of a dangerous situation which must be acted upon by others before producing the injury is an instance. As long as the concurring intervening agency is foreseeable and the dangerous situation preventable by the performance of the omitted act, nonaction or failure to perform the omitted act constitutes negligence.

But negligence is relative. What may be characterized as due care under one set of circumstances may constitute negligence under another and different set of circumstances. So where, as here, the alleged negligence was the failure to take precautions reasonably necessary to prevent a pipe such as caused the injury from being easily dislodged from a position where it would normally, if dislodged, roll down the decline in the park, the presence or absence of negligence depends for its solution primarily upon the person or group of persons to whom the duty is due, his or their age and discretion, the inherent qualities of the pipe, the locus in quo, in short all the attendant circumstances “because upon such facts * * * depend [s] the degree of care which prudence would suggest as reasonably necessary to *259 guard others against injury.” Barrett v. Southern Pacific Co., 91 Cal. 296, 302, 27 Pac. 666, 667.

Municipal parks in addition to their esthetic value are natural playgrounds for children. It is essentially for their use that public parks are established and maintained. Hence it is that the degree of care required of the municipality to keep its public parks in a reasonably safe condition for children must be consistent with its use by children possessing only the instincts and lacking in the discretion and restraint by which their immaturity is marked. “It is a matter of common experience that children of tender years are guided in their actions by childish instincts, and are lacking in that discretion which is ordinarily sufficient to enable those of more mature years to appreciate and avoid danger, and in proportion to this lack of judgment on their part, the care which must be observed toward them by others is increased.” Barrett v. Southern Pacific Co., supra, pp. 302, 303. (See also Powers v. Harlow, 53 Mich. 507, 19 N. W. 257.) Not the least of childish instincts is the proclivity to intermeddle with objects or devices which excite their curiosity or suggest means of amusement. And if it may be reasonably anticipated that children might resort for amusement to, or intermeddle with, an object or device, left unguarded in a public park, to the injury of themselves or others and ordinary prudence would counsel precautionary measures to prevent such injury, nonaction in that respect would constitute negligence for which the municipality would be liable where such negligence was the proximate cause of an injury. (Ramirez v. Cheyenne, supra.)

The pipe lay immediately adjoining a decline in'the grounds of the park. It was in such a position that it would normally, if dislodged, roll down the decline. The inherent qualities of the pipe admitted of its rolling down the decline unaided. If dislodged it was inevitable that it would *260 roll down the decline. Ordinary prudence counseled precautions against the pipe being set in motion from any cause. Moreover the servants and employees of the city and county knew or were charged with knowledge that children were accustomed to play in this park. They were chargeable with knowledge of the attributes of children. Two of the employees of the city and county testified that they scotched the pipe with irregular concrete blocks, each weighing about eighteen pounds, using three blocks for each side of the pipe.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Haw. 256, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wax-ex-rel-wax-v-city-of-honolulu-haw-1937.