Chambers v. Carroll
Chambers v. Carroll
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The facts on which the question to be considered arises, may be briefly stated. William Chambers, a boy twelve years old, was seated on a log one foot in diameter and four feet long, which was on a vacant lot, close to the end of a frame shop that fronted on Haverford avenue, about midway between 59th and 60th streets. The shop was eight feet from the curb, and the space between it and 59th street was open. A companion named Kennedy sat on a piece of board between Chambers and the avenue. A horse and cart owned by the defendants and in charge of their driver, were suddenly turned from the avenue, and without warning crossed the curb and the footwalk to the
The testimony made out a prima facie case of negligence on the part of the driver, who without warning turned from the street and drove on the lot where the boys were seated and were in plain view after he reached 59th street. The learned trial judge regarded the case as a close one, but entered a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff was thrown or forced under the wheel by the movement of the log; and whether its movement was caused by Kennedy’s striking it or by the plaintiff in his effort to escape, the cause of the accident was not one for which the defendant was liable. This, we think, is not the correct view.
The wrongful act of the driver was the direct and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. It placed him in a position of imminent peril, where he would have been run over if he had sat still, and where his only means of escape was to run at the side of the horse and in front of the wheel until he passed the shop. If the log had been in his way, and he had fallen over it, or if it had not been there at all, and he had tripped and fallen from some other cause as he ran, his fall while resulting in
The judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
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- Negligence—Remote and proximate cause—Question for jury. In an action to recover damages for personal injuries by a boy twelve years old the evidence tended to show that the plaintiff at the time of the accident was seated in a vacant lot on a log close to a frame building. Seated nearby was a companion. A horse and cart owned by defendant was suddenly driven on the lot at a point where carts had not been driven on to the lot, and where the curb was eight inches high. The horse hauling the cart was driven so rapidly that the boys did not see him until he was almost upon them, and he passed so near them that they could not sit on the log or stand between the horse and the building. Plaintiff in his attempt to escape was pushed or struck by the log and fell under the wheel of the cart and was injured. What caused the log to move did not clearly appear. Plaintiff testified that he thought that his companion in jumping must have moved the log. The boys were in plain view of the driver when he turned upon the lot. Held (1) that the question of defendant’s negligence was for the jury; (2) that the moving of the log was not the proximate cause of the injury; (3) that if the moving of the log was the cause of the injury, it was the innocent cause, and between an innocent and a culpable cause, the latter is the proximate and legally responsible cause.