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[DAVID TAYLOR v. MANILA ELECTRIC RAILROAD](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cfc4?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 4977, Mar 22, 1910 ]

DAVID TAYLOR v. MANILA ELECTRIC RAILROAD +

DECISION

16 Phil. 8

[ G.R. No. 4977, March 22, 1910 ]

DAVID TAYLOR, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. THE MANILA ELECTRIC RAILROAD AND LIGHT COMPANY, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

CARSON, J.:

An action to recover damages for the loss of an eye and other injuries, instituted by David  Taylor, a  minor, by his father, his nearest relative.

The defendant is a foreign  corporation engaged in the operation of  a street railway and an electric light system in the city of Manila.  Its  power plant is situated at the eastern end of a small island in the Pasig River within the city of Manila, known  as  the Isla  del Provisor.   The power plant may be reached by boat  or  by crossing a footbridge, impassable for  vehicles,  at the westerly  end of the island.

The plaintiff, David Taylor, was at the  time when he received the  injuries complained of,  15 years of age, the son of a mechanical engineer, more mature  than the average boy of his age,  and  having considerable aptitude  and training in mechanics.

On the 30th of September,  1905,  plaintiff, with a  boy named Manuel Claparols, about  12  years of age, crossed the footbridge to the Isla del Provisor, for the purpose of visiting one Murphy, an employee of the defendant, who had promised to make them a cylinder for a miniature engine. Finding on inquiry that Mr. Murphy was not in his quarters, the  boys, impelled  apparently by youthful curiosity and  perhaps  by the unusual interest which both seem to have taken in machinery, spent  some time in wandering about the company's  premises.  The  visit was  made on a Sunday afternoon, and it does not appear  that they saw or spoke to anyone after leaving the power house where they had asked for Mr. Murphy.

After watching the operation of the traveling crane used in handling the defendant's  coal, they walked across  the open  space in  the  neighborhood of the place  where  the company dumped the cinders and ashes from its furnaces. Here they found some twenty or thirty brass fulminating caps scattered  on the ground.  These caps are approximately of the size and appearance of small pistol cartridges and each has attached to it two long thin wires by means of which it may be discharged by the use of electricity. They  are intended  for  use in the explosion of blasting charges of dynamite, and have in themselves a considerable explosive power.  After some discussion as to the ownership of the  caps, and their right  to take them, the boys picked up all they  could find,  hung them on a stick,  of which each took one end, and carried  them home.  After crossing the footbridge, they met a little girl named Jessie Adrian, less than 9  years old, and all three went  to the home  of  the boy Manuel.  The boys  then made a series of experiments  with the caps.   They thrust the ends  of the wires into  an electric  light socket and obtained  no result.  They next tried to break the  cap with a stone and failed.   Manuel  looked for a hammer,  but could not find one.  They then opened one of the caps with a knife, and finding  that it  was filled with a  yellowish substance they got  matches, and  David  held the cap  while Manuel applied a lighted match to the contents.   An  explosion followed,  causing more or less serious injuries to all three. Jessie,  who,  when the boys  proposed  putting a  match  to the contents of the cap,  became frightened and started  to run away, received a slight cut in  the  neck.  Manuel had his hand  burned and wounded, and David was struck  in the face by several particles of the metal capsule, one  of which  injured his right eye to such an  extent as to  necessitate its  removal by the surgeons who were called in to care for his  wounds.

The  evidence does  not definitely and conclusively disclose how the caps came to be on the defendant's  premises, nor how long  they had been  there when the boys found them. It appears, however,  that some months  before the accident, during the construction of the defendant's plant, detonating caps of the same size and kind as those found by the boys were used in sinking a well at the power plant near the place  where  the caps were  found; and it  also appears that at or about the time when these caps were  found, similar caps were in use in the construction of an extension of defendant's street car line to Fort  William McKinley. The  caps when found appeared to the boys who picked them up to have been lying there for a considerable time, and  from the  place where they were  found would seem to have  been  discarded as  defective or worthless  and fit only to be thrown upon the rubbish heap.

No measures seem to have been adopted by the defendant company to prohibit or prevent visitors from entering and walking  about  its  premises unattended, when they  felt disposed so to  do.  As  admitted  in defendant counsel's brief, "it is undoubtedly  true that children in  their play sometimes crossed the footbridge to the island;" and, we may add, roamed about at will on the uninclosed premises of the defendant, in the neighborhood  of the place where the caps were  found.  There is no evidence  that any effort ever was made  to forbid  these children from visiting the defendant company's premises, although it must  be assumed that the company  or its employees were aware of the fact that they not infrequently  did  so.

Two  years  before the accident, plaintiff spent  four months at sea,  as a cabin boy  on  one of the interisland transports.  Later he took up work in his  father's office, learning mechanical drawing and mechanical engineering. About a  month after his accident he obtained employment as a mechanical draftsman and  continued in that employment for six  months at a salary of P2.50  a day; and it appears that he was a boy  of more than average intelligence, taller and more mature  both mentally and physically than most boys of fifteen.

The facts set out in the foregoing statement are to our mind fully and conclusively established by the evidence of record, and are substantially admitted by counsel.  The only questions of  fact  which are  seriously disputed  are plaintiff's allegations that the caps which  were found by plaintiff  on defendant company's premises were the property of the defendant,  or that they had  come  from its possession and control, and that the company or some of its employees  left them exposed on  its premises  at  the point where they were found.

The evidence in support of these allegations is meager, and the  defendant company, apparently relying  on the rule of law  which places the burden  of proof of such allegations upon the plaintiff, offered no evidence in rebuttal, and insists that plaintiff failed  in  his proof.  We think, however, that  plaintiff's evidence is  sufficient to sustain a finding in accord with his allegations in this regard.

It was proven that caps, similar to those found by plaintiff, were used, more or less  extensively,  on the McKinley extension of the defendant company's track; that some of these caps were used in blasting a  well on the company's premises a few months before the  accident;  that not  far from the place where  the  caps  were found the company has a storehouse for  the materials,  supplies, and so forth, used by  it in its operations as a  street railway and  a purveyor of electric light;  and  that the place, in the neighborhood  of  which  the caps were found, was  being used by the company as  a sort of  dumping ground for ashes and cinders.   Fulminating caps or detonators for the discharge by electricity  of blasting  charges  by dynamite are not articles in common use by  the average citizen, and under all the circumstances, and in the  absence of all evidence to the contrary, we think that  the discovery of  twenty or thirty  of these  caps  at the place where they  were found by the  plaintiff on defendant's  premises fairly justifies the inference that the  defendant company was either the owner of the caps in  question or had these caps under its possession and control.  We think also that the evidence tends to  disclose that these caps or detonators were willfully and knowingly  thrown  by  the company or its  employees at the  spot where  they were found, with the expectation that  they would  be buried out of sight by the ashes which  it  was engaged in dumping in that neighborhood,  they being old and perhaps defective; and, however this may be,  we are satisfied that the evidence  is sufficient to sustain a  finding that the company or some of its employees either willfully or through an oversight left them exposed at a point on its premises which the general public, including children at play, were not prohibited from visiting, and over which the company knew or ought to have known that young boys were likely to roam about in pastime or in play.

Counsel for appellant endeavors to weaken or destroy the probative value of the facts on which these conclusions are based by intimating or rather assuming that the blasting work on the company's  well and on its McKinley extension was done by contractors.  It was conclusively proven, however, that while the workman employed in blasting the well was regularly employed by J. G.  White &  Co., a firm of contractors, he did the  work on the well directly and immediately under the supervision and control of  one of defendant company's foremen, and there is no proof whatever in the record that the blasting on the McKinley extension was done by independent contractors.   Only  one witness testified upon this point, and while he stated that he understood that a part of this work was done by  contract,  he could not say so of his  own knowledge, and knew nothing of the terms and conditions of the alleged contract, or of the relations of the alleged contractor to the defendant company.  The fact having been proven that detonating caps were more or less extensively employed  on  work done by the defendant company's directions and  on  its behalf, we think that the company should have introduced  the necessary evidence to support its contention if it wished to avoid the not unreasonable inference that it was the owner of the material used  in these operations and that it  was responsible for tortious or negligent  acts of the agents employed therein, on the ground  that this work had been  intrusted to independent contractors as to  whose acts the maxim respondeat superior should not be applied. If the company did not in fact own  or make  use of  caps  such as  those found on its premises,  as intimated by  counsel, it was  a very simple matter for it to  prove that fact, and in the absence of such proof we think that the  other evidence in the record sufficiently establishes the contrary, and justifies the court in drawing the reasonable inference that the caps found on  its premises were  its property, and  were left where they were found by the company or some  of its employees.

Plaintiff appears to have rested his case, as did the trial judge his decision in plaintiff's  favor, upon the provisions of article 1089 of the Civil Code read together with articles 1902, 1903, and  1908 of that code.
"ART.  1089. Obligations are created by law, by contracts, by quasi-contracts,  and by illicit acts and  omissions or by those in which any kind of fault  or negligence occurs."

"Art.  1902. A person who by an act or omission causes damage to another when  there is fault or  negligence shall be obliged to repair the damage  so done.

"Art.  1903. The  obligation imposed by the  preceding article is  demandable, not only for personal acts and omissions,  but also  for  those  of the persons  for whom they should be responsible.

"The father, and on his death or incapacity the mother, is liable  for  the damages  caused by  the minors who live with them.

*    *    *    *    *    *    *

"Owners or directors of an establishment or enterprise are equally liable for the damages caused by their employees in the service of the branches in which the latter may be employed or on account of their  duties. "

*    *    *    *    *    *    *    *

"The liability referred to in this article shall cease when the persons mentioned therein prove  that they employed all the diligence of a good father of a family to avoid the damage."

"Art. 1908.  The owners  shall  also be liable  for  the damages caused -

"1. By the explosion of machines which may not have been cared for  with due diligence, and for kindling of explosive substances which may not have been placed in  a safe and proper place."
Counsel for defendant  and appellant rests his appeal strictly upon his contention that  the facts proven at the trial do not establish the liability of the defendant company under the provisions of these articles, and since we agree with this view of the case, it is not necessary for us to consider the various questions as to  the form and the right of action (analagous to those raised in the case of Rakes vs. Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Co.,  7 Phil. Rep., 359), which would, perhaps, be involved in a decision affirming the judgment of the court below.

We agree with counsel for appellant that under the Civil Code, as under the generally accepted doctrine in the United States,  the plaintiff in an action such as that under consideration, in  order to establish his  right to a recovery, must establish by competent evidence:

(1)  Damages to the plaintiff.

(2)  Negligence by act or omission of which  defendant personally, or some  person for whose acts it must respond, was guilty.

(3)  The connection of cause and effect between the negligence and the damage.

These propositions are, of course, elementary, and do not admit of  discussion, the real difficulty arising in  the  application of these principles to the particular facts developed in the case under consideration.

It is clear that the accident could not have happened had not  the fulminating caps  been  left  exposed at the point where  they were  found, or if their owner had exercised due care in keeping  them in an appropriate place; but it is equally  clear that plaintiff would  not have been  injured had  he not, for his own pleasure and convenience,  entered upon defendant's premises,  and strolled  around  thereon without the express permission of  the defendant, and had he not picked up and carried away the property of the defendant which  he found on its  premises, and had he not thereafter deliberately cut open one of the caps and applied a match to its contents.

But counsel for plaintiff contends that because of plaintiff's youth  and inexperience,  his  entry  upon  defendant company's premises, and the intervention of his  action between the negligent act of defendant in leaving the caps exposed on its premises and the accident which resulted in his injury should not be held to  have contributed in any wise  to the  accident,  which should be  deemed  to be the direct result of defendant's negligence in leaving the caps exposed at the place where they were found by the plaintiff, and this latter the proximate cause of the accident which occasioned the injuries sustained by him.

In  support of his contention, counsel  for plaintiff  relies on the  doctrine laid down in  many of  the courts of last resort in the  United  States  in the cases  known as  the "Torpedo" and "Turntable"  cases, and the cases  based thereon.

In  the typical  cases, the  question  involved  has  been whether a railroad company is liable for  an injury received by an infant of tender years, who from mere idle curiosity, or for  purposes of amusement, enters  upon the railroad company's premises, at a place  where the railroad company knew, or had  good reason to  suppose, children  would be likely to come, and there found explosive signal  torpedoes left exposed  by the railroad company's  employees, one of which when  carried away  by the visitor, exploded and injured him; or where such  infant found upon the premises a dangerous machine, such as a turntable, left in  such condition as to make it probable that  children in playing with it  would be exposed to accident or injury therefrom and where the infant did in fact suffer injury in playing with such machine.

In these, and in a great variety of similar cases,  the great weight of authority holds the owner of the premises liable.

As  laid down in Railroad Co. vs.  Stout (17 Wall. (84 U. S.), 657),  (wherein the principal  question  was whether a railroad company was  liable for an injury received by an infant while upon  its  premises,  from  idle  curiosity, or for purposes  of amusement,  if such  injury was, under the  circumstances,  attributable  to  the  negligence of the company),  the principles  on which these cases turn are that "while a  railroad company is not bound: to the  same degree of care in regard to mere strangers who are unlawfully upon  its premises that it owes to passengers conveyed  by it, it is not exempt from responsibility to such strangers for injuries arising from its negligence or  from its tortious  acts;"  and that "the  conduct of  an infant of tender years is not to be judged by the same rule which governs  that of an  adult.  While it is the general rule in regard to an adult that to entitle him to recover damages for an  injury resulting from the fault or negligence of another  he  must himself have been free from fault,  such is not the rule in regard to an infant of tender years. The care and  caution required  of a child  is according to his maturity and capacity only, and  this  is to  be determined  in each case  by the circumstances  of the  case."

The  doctrine of the case of Railroad Company vs. Stout was vigorously controverted and sharply criticized in several state courts,  and the  supreme court of Michigan in the case of  Ryan vs. Towar  (128 Mich., 463)  formally repudiated and disapproved the doctrine of the Turntable cases, especially that laid  down  in Railroad  Company vs. Stout, in a very able decision wherein it held, in the language of the syllabus:  (1) That the owner of land is not liable to trespassers thereon for injuries sustained by them, not due to his wanton or willful acts; (2) that no exception to this rule  exists in favor of children who  are injured by  dangerous  machinery  naturally calculated to attract them to  the premises;  (3)  that  an invitation or license to cross  the premises of another can not be predicated on the mere fact  that no steps have been taken  to  interfere with such practice; (4) thajt there is no difference between children  and adults as to the circumstances that will warrant the inference of an invitation or a  license to enter upon another's premises.

Similar criticisms  of the opinion in the case of Railroad

Taylor vs. Manila Electric Railroad and Light  Co. Company vs. Stout were indulged in by the courts in Connecticut and Massachusetts.  (Nolan vs. Railroad Co., 53 Conn., 461; 154  Mass., 349).  And the doctrine has been questioned in Wisconsin,  Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, and perhaps in other States.

On the other hand, many if  not most of the courts of last resort in the United States, citing and approving the doctrine laid down in England in the leading case of Lynch vs. Nurding (1 Q. B., 29, 35, 36), lay down the rule in these cases in accord with that  announced in  Railroad Company vs.  Stout (supra), and the  Supreme Court of the  United States, in a  unanimous  opinion  delivered by Justice  Harlan in the case of Union Pacific Railway Co. vs. McDonald (152 U. S., 262) on the 5th  of  March, 1894, reexamined and  reconsidered the doctrine laid down in Railroad Co. vs. Stout, and after an exhaustive and critical analysis  and review of many of the  adjudged cases, both English  and American, formally declared  that  it adhered "to the principles announced'in  the case of  Railroad Co. vs. Stout."

In the case of  Union Pacific Railway Co. vs. McDonald (supra)  the facts were as follows: The plaintiff, a boy 12 years of age,  out of curiosity and for his own pleasure, entered upon and visited the defendant's  premises, without defendant's express permission or invitation, and, while there, was by accident injured  by falling  into  a  burning slack pile of whose existence he had no  knowledge,  but which had been left by defendant on  its premises without any  fence around it  or  anything to  give  warning of its dangerous  condition,  although  defendant  knew  or had reason to believe  that it was in  a place where it would attract the interest or curiosity  of passers-by.  On these facts the court held that the plaintiff could not be regarded as a mere trespasser, for whose safety and protection while on the premises  in  question, against the  unseen  danger referred to, the defendant was under no obligation  to make provision.

We quote at length from the discussion  by the court of the application  of the principles involved  to  the facts in that case, because what is said there is strikingly applicable in the case at bar, and would seem to dispose of defendant's  contention that, the  plaintiff  in this  case being a trespasser, the defendant company owed him no duty, and in no case could be  held liable  for  injuries which would not have resulted but for the entry of plaintiff on defendant's premises.
"We adhere to the principles announced  in Railroad Co. vs.  Stout  (supra).   Applied  to the case  now before  us, they require us to  hold that  the defendant was  guilty of negligence in leaving unguarded the slack pile,  made by it in the vicinity of its depot building.  It  could  have  forbidden all persons from coming to its coal mine for purposes merely of curiosity and pleasure.   But it did not do so.   On the  contrary, it permitted all,  without regard to age, to visit  its mine, and witness its operation.  It knew that the usual approach to the mine was by a narrow path skirting its slack pit, close to  its depot building, at which  the people of the village,  old and young, would often assemble.   It knew that children were  in  the habit of frequenting that locality and playing around  the shaft house  in  the immediate vicinity  of the   slack pit.   The slightest regard for  the safety of  these  children would have suggested  that  they were  in  danger from  being so near a  pit, beneath  the  surface of  which was  concealed (except when snow,  wind, or rain prevailed) a mass of burning coals into  which a child  might accidentally  fall and  be burned  to  death.  Under all the circumstances, the railroad  company ought not to  be heard to say that the plaintiff,  a  mere lad, moved by curiosity to see the mine, in the  vicinity of  the  slack  pit, was  a trespasser, to whom it owed no  duty, or for whose protection it  was under no obligation to make provisions.

"In Townsend vs.  Wathen (9 East.,  277, 281)  it  was held that if a man place dangerous traps, baited with flesh, in his own ground, so near to a highway, or to the premises of another, that dogs  passing along the highway, or kept in his  neighbors premises,  would  probably be  attracted by their  instinct into the traps,  and in  consequence  of such act  his neighbor's dogs be so attracted and thereby injured, an action on  the case  would lie.  'What difference,' said  Lord Ellenborough,  C. J.,  'is  there  in reason between drawing the  animal into the trap by  means  of his  instinct which  he can  not resist, and putting him there by  manual force?'  What difference, in  reason we may  observe  in this  case,  is there between an express license  to the children of this village to  visit the defendant's coal mine, in  the vicinity of its slack pile, and an implied license,  resulting from the habit  of the  defendant to permit them, without objection or warning, to do so  at will, for purposes of curiosity or pleasure?  Referring  to the  case  of  Townsend vs. Wathen,  Judge  Thompson,  in his work  on the Law  of Negligence, volume 1,  page 305, note, well says:  'It would be a barbarous rule of law that would make the owner of land liable  for setting a  trap thereon, baited with stinking meat, so  that  his neighbor's dog, attracted by his natural instincts, might run into  it and  be  killed, and which would  exempt him from liability for the consequences  of leaving  exposed  and unguarded on his land a dangerous machine, so that his  neighbor's child attracted to it and tempted  to inter middle with  it by  instincts equally strong, might thereby  be  killed or maimed for life.'"
Chief  Justice Cooley, voicing the opinion of the supreme court of Michigan, in  the case of Powers  vs. Harlow (53 Mich., 507),  said that  (p.  515):
"Children, wherever  they  go,  must be expected to act upon childlike instincts and impulses; and others who are chargeable with a duty of care and  caution toward  them must calculate upon this, and  take precautions  accordingly.  If they leave exposed  to the observation of children anything which would  be  tempting  to them, and which they in their immature judgment might naturally suppose they were at liberty to  handle or play with, they should expect that liberty to be taken."
And the same eminent  jurist in his  treatise on torts, alluding to the doctrine of implied invitation to visit the premises of another, says:
"In the case of young children, and other persons not fully sui juris, an  implied  license might sometimes  arise when it would not on  behalf  of  others.  Thus leaving a tempting thing for children to play with exposed, where they would  be  likely to gather for that  purpose, may be equivalent to an invitation to them to make use of  it; and, perhaps, if one were to throw away upon his premises, near the common way,  things tempting to children, the same implication should arise."   (Chap. 10, p. 303.)
The reasoning which led the Supreme Court of the United States  to its conclusions in the cases of  Railroad Co. vs. Stout (supra) and Union Pacific Railroad Co. vs. McDonald (supra) is not  less cogent and  convincing in this jurisdiction than in that wherein those cases originated.   Children here are actuated by similar childish instincts and impulses. Drawn by curiosity and impelled  by the  restless spirit of youth,  boys here as well as there will  usually be found wherever the public is permitted to congregate.  The movement of machinery, and indeed anything  which arouses the attention of the young and inquiring mind,  will draw them to the neighborhood as inevitably as does the magnet draw the iron which comes within the range of its magnetic influence.   The owners  of premises, therefore, whereon things attractive to children are exposed, or upon which the public are expressly or impliedly permitted to enter or  upon which the owner knows or ought to know children are likely to roam about for pastime and in play, "must calculate  upon this, and take precautions accordingly."   In such cases the owner of the premises can not be heard to say that because the child has entered upon his premises without his express permission he is a trespasser to whom the owner owes no duty or obligation whatever.   The owner's failure to take reasonable precautions to prevent the child from entering his premises at a place where he knows or ought to know that  children are accustomed  to roam about  or to which their childish instincts and impulses are  likely to attract them is at least equivalent to an implied  license to enter, and where the child  does enter under such conditions the owner's failure to take reasonable precautions to guard the child against injury  from unknown  or  unseen  dangers, placed upon such premises by the owner, is clearly a breach of duty, a negligent omission,  for which he may and should be held responsible, if the child is actually  injured,  without other fault on its part than that it had entered on the premises of a stranger without his  express invitation or  permission.   To hold otherwise would be to expose all the children in the community to unknown perils and unnecessary danger at the whim of the owners or occupants of  land upon which they might naturally and reasonably be expected to enter.

This  conclusion is founded on reason, justice, and necessity, and neither the  contention that a man has a right to do  what he will with his own property or that  children should be kept under the care of their parents or guardians, so as to prevent their entering on the premises of others, is of sufficient weight to put it in doubt.   In this jurisdiction as  well as in  the United States all private property is acquired and  held under the  tacit condition  that  it shall not be  so used as to injure the  equal rights of others  or greatly  impair the public rights and interests  of the community  (see U.  S. vs. Toribio,[1]  No. 5060,  decided January 26,  1910), and except as to infants of very tender years it would be absurd and unreasonable in a community organized as is that in which we live to hold that parents or guardians are guilty of negligence or imprudence in every case wherein they permit growing boys and girls to leave the parental roof unattended, even if  in the  event  of  accident to the child  the negligence of the parent could in any event be imputed to the child so as to deprive it of a right to recover in such cases - a point which we neither discuss nor decide.

But while we hold that the entry of the plaintiff upon defendant's property without defendant's express invitation or permission would not have relieved defendant from responsibility for  injuries incurred there by plaintiff, without other fault on his part, if such  injury  were attributable to the negligence of the defendant, we are of opinion that under all the  circumstances of this case the negligence of the defendant in leaving the caps exposed on its premises was  not the proximate cause of the injury received by the plaintiff, which  therefore was not, properly speaking, "attributable to the negligence of the defendant," and, on the other hand, we are satisfied that plaintiff's action in cutting open the detonating cap and putting a match to its contents was  the proximate cause of the explosion and of the resultant  injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff, and  that the defendant, therefore, is not civilly responsible for the injuries thus incurred.

Plaintiff contends, upon the authority of the Turntable and  Torpedo  cases,  that because  of plaintiff's youth the intervention of his action between the negligent act of the defendant in leaving the caps exposed on its premises and the explosion  which  resulted in his  injury  should not be "held to have contributed in any wise to the accident; and it is because we can not agree witli this proposition, although we accept the doctrine of the Turntable and Torpedo cases, that  we have thought proper to discuss and to consider that doctrine at length in this decision.  As was  said in case of Railroad Co. vs. Stout (supra), "While it is the general rule  in regard to  an adult that to entitle him to recover damages for an injury resulting from the fault or negligence of another  he must himself  have been free from  fault, such is not the rule in regard to an infant of tender years. The  care  and caution required of a  child is according to his maturity and capacity only, and this is to be determined in each case by the circumstances of the case." As we think we have shown, under the reasoning on which rests the doctrine of the Turntable and Torpedo cases, no fault which would relieve defendant of responsibility for injuries resulting from its negligence can be attributed to the plaintiff,  a well-grown boy of 15 years of age, because of his entry upon defendant's uninclosed premises without express permission or invitation;  but it is a wholly different question whether  such a  youth  can be said to have been free from fault when  he willfully and deliberately cut open the detonating cap, and placed a match to the contents, knowing,  as he undoubtedly did,  that his action would result in an explosion.  On this point,  which must be determined by "the particular circumstances of this case," the doctrine laid  down in the Turntable and Torpedo  cases  lends  us no direct aid, although it is worthy of observation that in all of the "Torpedo"  and  analogous cases to which our attention has been directed, the record discloses that the plaintiffs, in whose favor judgments have been affirmed, were of such  tender years that they were  held  not to have  the capacity to  understand the nature or character of the explosive instruments which fell into their hands.

In the case at  bar, plaintiff  at the time of the accident was  a well-grown youth of 15,  more mature both mentally and physically than the average boy of his age; he had been to sea as a  cabin boy; was  able to earn P2.50 a day as a mechanical draftsman thirty days after the injury was incurred; and the  record discloses throughout that he was exceptionally well qualified  to  take care of himself.  The evidence of  record leaves no room if or doubt that, despite his denials on the witness  stand, he well knew the explosive character of the cap  with which he was amusing himself. The  series of experiments made by him  in his attempt  to produce an  explosion, as  described by the little girl who was present, admit of no  other explanation.  His attempt to discharge the cap by the use of electricity, followed by his efforts to explode  it with a stone or a hammer, and the final success of his endeavors brought about by the application of a match  to the contents of the cap, show clearly that he knew what he was about.   Nor can there be any reasonable doubt that he had reason to anticipate that the explosion might be dangerous, in view of the fact that the little girl, 9 years of age, who  was with him at the time when he put the  match to the contents of the cap, became frightened and ran away.

True, he may not have known  and probably did not know the precise nature of the explosion which might be expected from the ignition of the contents of the cap, and of course he  did not anticipate the  resultant injuries which he  incurred; but he well  knew that  a more  or  less  dangerous explosion might be expected from his act, and yet he willfully, recklessly,  and knowingly produced  the  explosion. It would be going far to say that "according  to his maturity and capacity"  he exercised  such "care  and  caution" as might reasonably be required of  him, or that the defendant or anyone else should be held civilly responsible for injuries incurred by him under such circumstances.

The  law fixes no arbitrary age at which a minor can be said to have the necessary capacity to understand and appreciate the nature and consequences of his  own  acts,  so as to make it negligence  on  his  part  to  fail to exercise due care and precaution  in  the commission  of  such acts; and indeed it would be impracticable and perhaps  impossible so to do, for in the very  nature of things the question of negligence necessarily depends on the  ability of the minor to understand the character of his own acts and their consequences; and the age at which a minor  can be  said to have such ability will necessarily vary in accordance with the varying nature of the infinite variety  of acts which may be  done by him.  But some  idea of the presumed capacity of infants under the laws in force in these Islands may be gathered  from an  examination of the varying ages fixed by our laws at which minors are conclusively presumed to be capable of exercising certain rights  and incurring certain responsibilities, though it can not be said that these provisions of law are of much practical assistance in cases such as that at bar, except so far as they illustrate the rule that the capacity of a minor to become responsible for his own acts varies with the varying circumstances of  each case.  Under the provisions of the Penal Code a minor over fifteen years of age is presumed to be capable of committing a crime and is to be held criminally responsible therefor, although the fact that he is less than eighteen years of  age will be taken into consideration as an extenuating circumstance (Penal Code, arts. 8 and 9).   At 10 years.of age a child may, under certain circumstances,  choose which parent it prefers to  live with (Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 771).   At 14 it may petition for the appointment of a guardian  (Id., sec. 551), and may consent or  refuse to be  adopted  (Id., sec. 765).   And males of 14 and females of  12 are capable of contracting  a legal marriage  (Civil Code, art. 83; G. 0., No. 68, sec. 1).

We are satisfied that the plaintiff in this case had sufficient capacity and understanding  to be sensible of the" danger to  which he exposed himself when he put the  match to the contents of the  cap; that he was sui juris in  the sense that his age and his  experience  qualified him to understand and appreciate the necessity for the  exercise of  that degree of caution which would have avoided the injury which resulted from his own deliberate act; and that the injury incurred by him must be held to have been the direct and immediate result of his  own willful and  reckless act, so that while it may be true  that these injuries would not have been incurred but for the negligent act of the defendant in leaving the caps exposed on its premises, nevertheless" plaintiff's own  act was the proximate and principal cause of the accident which inflicted the injury.

The rule of the Roman law was: Quod quis ex culpa sua damnum sentit, non intelligitur damnum sentire.   (Digest, book 50,  tit. 17, rule 203.)

The Partidas contain the following provisions:
"The just thing is that a man should suffer the damage which comes to him through his  own fault,  and that he can not demand reparation therefor from another."   (Law 25, tit. 5, Partida 3.)

"And they even said that when a man received an injury through his own negligence he" should blame himself for it." (Rule 22, tit. 34, Partida 7.).

"According to ancient sages, when  a man received  an injury through his own acts the grievance should be against himself and not against another."   (Law 2, tit. 7, Partida 2.)
And while there does not  appear to be anything in the Civil  Code  which expressly lays  down the law  touching contributory negligence in this jurisdiction, nevertheless, the interpretation placed upon its provisions by the supreme court of Spain, and  by this court  in the case of Rakes vs. Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific Co.  (7  Phil. Rep., 359), clearly deny  to the plaintiff in  the case at bar the right to recover damages from the defendant, in whole or in part, for the injuries sustained by him.

The judgment  of the supreme court of Spain of the 7th of March, 1902  (93 Jurisprudencia  Civil, 391), is directly in point.  In that case the court said:
"According to  the doctrine expressed in  article 1902 of the Civil Code, fault or negligence is a source of obligation when between such negligence and the injury there exists the relation of cause and effect: but if the injury produced should not be the result of  acts or omissions of a  third party, the latter  has no  obligation to repair the same, although such acts  or  omissions  were imprudent or  unlawful, and much less when it is shown that the immediate cause of the injury was the negligence of the injured party himself."
The same court, in its decision of June 12, 1900, said that "the existence of  the alleged fault or negligence is not sufficient without proof that it,  and no other cause, gave rise to the damage."

See also judgment of October 21, 1903.

To  similar effect  Scaevola, the learned Spanish writer, writing under that title in his Jurisprudencia del Codigo Civil (1902 Anuario, p. 455), commenting on the decision of March 7, 1902,  says that "in accordance  with the doctrine expressed by article 1902 of the Civil  Code, fault or negligence gives rise to an obligation when between it and the damage  there exists the  relation of cause and  effect; but if the damage caused does not arise from acts or omissions of a third person, there is no obligation to make good upon the latter, even though such acts or omissions be imprudent or illegal, and much less  so. when it is  shown that the immediate  cause of the damage lias been  the  recklessness of the injured party himself."

And again  -
"In accordance with the fundamental principle of proof, that the  burden thereof is upon the plaintiff, it is apparent that it is the duty of him who shall claim damages to establish their existence.  The decisions of  April 9, 1896, and March 18, July  6, and September 27, 1898,  have especially supported the principle, the first  setting forth in detail the necessary points of the proof, which are two:  An  act  or omission on the part of the person who  is to be charged with the liability, and the production of  the damage by said act or omission.

"This  includes, by inference, the establishment of a relation of cause or effect  between the act or  the omission and the damage; the latter must be the direct result of one  of the first  two.  As the decision of March  22, 1881, said, it is necessary that the damages result immediately and directly from an  act performed culpably  and wrongfully; 'necessarily presupposing a legal ground for imputability.'" (Decision of October 29, 1887.)

"Negligence is not presumed, but must be proven by him who alleges it."   (Scaevola, Jurisprudencia del Codigo Civil, vol. 6, pp. 551, 552.)
(Cf. decisions of supreme court  of Spain of June 12,1900, and June 23, 1900.)

Finally, we think the doctrine in this jurisdiction applicable to the case at bar was definitely settled in this court in the maturely considered case of Rakes vs. Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific Co. (supra), wherein we held that while "There are many cases (personal injury cases) in the supreme court of Spain  in which the defendant was exonerated," on the ground that "the negligence of the plaintiff was the immediate cause of the casualty" (decisions of  the 15th of January, the 19th of February, and the  7th  of March, 1902, stated in  Alcubilla's Index of that year); none of the cases decided by the supreme court of Spain "define the effect to be given the negligence of a plaintiff which contributed to his injury as one of its causes, though not the principal one, and we are left to seek the theory  of the civil law in the practice of other countries;" and in such cases we declared the law in this jurisdiction to require the application of "the principle of proportional damages," but expressly and  definitely denied the right  of recovery when the acts of the  injured party were the immediate causes  of  the accident.

The doctrine as  laid down in that case is as follows:
"Difficulty  seems  to be  apprehended  in deciding which acts  of the injured party  shall be considered immediate causes of the accident.  The test is  simple.   Distinction must be made between the accident and the injury, between the event itself, without which there  could have been no accident,  and those acts  of the victim  not entering into it, independent of it, but contributing to  his  own  proper hurt.  For instance,  the cause  of the accident under review was  the  displacement of the crosspiece or the  failure to replace it.  This  produced the event  giving occasion for damages  that is,  the  sinking  of the track and  the sliding  of the iron  rails.   To  this  event, the  act  of  the plaintiff in walking by the side  of the car  did not contribute,  although it was an  element of the  damage which came to himself.  Had the crosspiece been out of place wholly or partly through his act or omission of duty, that would  have been  one of the determining causes  of  the event or accident, for which he would have been responsible. Where he contributes to the principal occurrence,  as one rf its determining factors, he can not  recover.  Where, in conjunction  with the occurrence,  he contributes  only  to his own injury, he may recover the amount that the defendant responsible  for the event should pay for such injury, less a sum deemed a suitable equivalent for his own imprudence."
We think  it is quite clear that under the doctrine thus stated, the immediate cause  of the explosion, the accident which resulted  in  plaintiff's injury, was his  own  act  in putting a match to the contents of the cap, and that haying "contributed to  the  principal occurrence, as one  of  its determining  factors,  he  can  not recover."

We have not deemed  it necessary  to examine the effect of plaintiff's action in picking up upon defendant's premises the detonating caps, the property of defendant, and carrying them away to  the home of his friend, as interrupting the relation of cause and effect between the negligent act or omission  of the defendant in  leaving the caps  exposed on its premises and the  injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff  by the explosion of one of these caps. Under the doctrine of the Torpedo cases, such  action on the part of an infant of very tender years would have no effect in relieving defendant  of responsibility, but whether in view of the well-known  fact admitted in  defendant's brief that "boys are  snappers-up  of  unconsidered trifles," a  youth of the age  and maturity of  plaintiff should be deemed without fault in picking up  the  caps  in question under all the circumstances of this case, we neither discuss nor decide.

Twenty days after the date of this decision let judgment be entered reversing the judgment  of the court  below, without costs to either party  in this instance, and ten days thereafter let the record be returned to the court wherein it  originated, where  judgment will  be entered in favor of the  defendant for the  costs in first instance and the complaint dismissed without  day.  So  ordered.

Arellano, C. J., Torres and Moreland, JJ., concur.

Johnson, J., concurs in the result.



[1]  15 Phil. Rep., 85.

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