Citation Numbers: 142 A.D. 504, 126 N.Y.S. 1009, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 339
Judges: Thomas
Filed Date: 1/20/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
A bright and active girl, three and a half years old, usually not allowed unattended to leave her home, was ■ sitting on a sidewalk nearly in front of >the tenement where her parents lived, when defendant’s coal wagon approached so near as to- pass over her legs, which were projecting beyond the curb. Does the law presume that such a child, under the facts presented, could use care sufficient, if not exercised, to justify an inference of negligence, to detect the wagon, and to appreciate that its continuance on its course in close proximity to her feet would cause it to come in contact with them and do injury, and that she could intelligently escape it 2 To hold her capable of care she must have usable capacity (1) for
The facts in the case at bar do not indicate that this little girl, intended to be kept by her mother’s side or under her- eye in the house, or in her custody if taken. beyond it, could have learned that on the sidewalk she should, if her feet projected, watch'lest a team should drive so near the curb as to encounter them.- If she did in fact see a team so near as to frighten her, she would know that her feet should be drawn out of the way. But she could not be deemed competent to watch for it in anticipation of its coming. But assume that she. did see it approaching, she would not be able to gauge its distance from her so as to conclude that she should take measures to- avoid it. There enter into such considerations the further element that so young a child is in her nature concerned only with what she is doing and. the recognized fact that such abstraction is not disturbed by a -sense of watchfulness, and that even if aroused by finding horses and wagons upon her, she might well err, in time or in action, in escaping from them, and it is impossible to conclude that she would be capable of any appreciable self-protection such as, in quality or quantity, a jury could measure. She may have been capable of some care, but it was negligible. The verdict was for $2,500. There is no specific evidence that supports a verdict for such an amount for' a child of such years. The jury must decide upon general considerations. Bor some years she would deduct rather than add by her labor to her father’s pecuniary condition. During her school life, expectable in this country, her helpfulness would be something, but it would not be until she had grown to maturity that she could have, a real working capacity, at home or elsewhere. If the verdict had been $1,500 the principal and interest on it accruing from the time of her death would be a sum equal or beyond what her father would have gained from the service she owed him. Indeed, a much smaller amount would liave. quite equaled any' legitimate expectation of gain, and conjecture is excluded.
Present — Jenks, P. J., Burr, Thomas, Carr and Rich, JJ.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event, unless within twenty days plaintiff stipulate to reduce the verdict to the sum of $1,500, in which event the judgment, as modified, and order are unanimously affirmed, without costs.