v.
The Missouri Pacific Railway Company
This is an action for the recovery of damages for the death of plaintiffs’ infant son Albert, which is alleged to have been caused by the negligent acts of defendant. . It is alleged in the petition that on the 27th day of May, 1878, defendant owned and operated a railroad through the City of Jefferson, and in connection therewith used and operated a turn-table so constructed and arranged as to be easily turned round and caused to revolve; that [*659] •said turn-table was situated in an open and public place in said City of Jefferson; that children were in the habit of resorting to-said turn-table and going upon the same to play; that said turn-table was , unfastened, without locks .-and unprotected by inclosures or otherwise, so as to prevent its being turned round at will by small children — of all which defendant had knowledge, and of the unsafe and dangerous condition of said turn-table; that the son of plaintiffs, who was- a child of tender years, without judgment or discretion above children of his own age, was by the wrongful acts and neglect of said defendant, in permitting said turn-table to remain unguarded and unfastened, and while- said turn-table was being revolved by •other children, so injured and wounded that he died from the effects thereof.
The defendant in the answer denies each allegation of the petition, and avers that the injury and death of the son of plaintiffs was caused by the negligence and carelessness of the child, and also by the carelessness and neglect of plaintiffs directly contributing to the injury.
Upon the trial of the cause plaintiffs obtained judgment for the sum of $1,050, from which defendant has .appealed, and assigns as the chief grounds of error the action of the court in overruling defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence, and in giving improper and refusing proper instructions.
[*661]
The above disposition of the objections made to the petition also disposes of the objections taken to the action of the court in giving plaintiffs’ first and fifth instructions, which are to the effect that if defendant used and operated said turn-table or had the charge of the same, it was liable for injuries occasioned by its neglect to keep the same so guarded or fastened that it could not be revolved. It also .disposes of the objections made to the action of the court in refusing defendant’s instructions to the effect that as the petition did not in terms allege that at the time of the injury the turn-table was owned or controlled by defendant, and as there was no evidence of either of these facts, the [*662] jury would find for defendant, and also the objections taken to the action of the court in refusing defendant’s fourth fifth, sixth and tenth instructions of a like character. The circuit court evidently tried the case on the theory that the averment in the petition that defendant used and operated the turn-table was equivalent to alleging that it had charge and control of the same, and accordingly, as we think properly, instructed the jury in the first and fifth of plaintiffs’ instructions, and properly refused instructions-numbered three, four, five, six and ten asked by defendant negativing plaintiffs’ right to recover on the ground that the petition did not in terms aver that the turn-table was either owned or controlled by defendant.
Defendant’s instruction in the nature of a demurrer-to the evidence was rightfully refused. There was evidence tending to show that the turn-table was erected by the Pacific Railroad Company in 1870, the land upon which-it was situated having been conveyed to it by II. C. Ewing, as agent for the City of Jefferson and other parties, with certain conditions annexed, in the event of a non-compliance with which the title was to revert to the city; that it. used said turn-table, which was connected with a roundhouse and also with the main track of the road, till 1876, when all the right and title of said company passed to and vested in defendant; that from that time and up to and after the injury to plaintiffs’ son defendant continued to use and operate said turn-table and the side-track or switch leading to it from the main track, when occasion required it; that although defendant had broken the conditions in the deed conveying title, no actual forfeiture or re-entry-by the city took place till in August, 1878, when defendant made a quit-claim deed to the city and restored possession. The evidence tended further to show that the turn-table was exclusively in the charge and under the control of defendant by its exclusive use and operation of it. It also tended further to show that the structure was erected on open ground in a well settled portion of the city, and near [*663] a place where the children habitually congregated as a play-ground, and where a large portion of the population went to attend circus exhibitions; that it was a dangerous structure when left exposed and unfastened, and was liable to injure children who might be enticed upon it; that children were in the habit of playing upon it, and had been previously injured by it — of all which defendant had knowledge.
Defendant also offered the following instructions:
8. The court instructs the jury that the undisputed evidence in this case shows that the mother of Albert Na-gel, the plaintiffs’ said deceased son, who is one of the plaintiffs in this suit, in the absence of her husband, who is the other plaintiff' and the father of said Albert Nagel, and on the day on which he was injured on the turn-table, [*664] placed their said son in charge and under the protection of their daughter, an elder sister of their said son, to go to a place near where he was injured, in Jefferson City, and that his said sister to whose care and protection his said mother had entrusted him, left him, her said brother, at or near the said place and went home, soon after which he was Injured upon the turn-table in question; and that such conduct on the part of his said sister, to whose care and protection his mother had entrusted him, was, in law, the act of the mother herself, and constituted such carelessness and negligence on their part as to prevent a recovery by the plaintiffs in this case, and the jury must find for defendant.
These instructions were refused, and an instruction given on the part of plaintiffs to the effect that unless the jury believed that Mrs. Nagel, in permitting her child Albert to go to the circus, omitted such reasonable care as persons of ordinary prudence exercise and deem adequate in the case of their children under like circumstances, or that Alice, the daughter of. plaintiffs, in leaving her brother Albert at the circus, omitted such reasonable care as would be ordinarily exercised under like circumstances by children of the same age, capacity and judgment as said Alice, then the jury should find that the defense of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiffs had not been made out.
It appears from the evidence that on the day the child was injured a circus company had advertised a performance on the open ground near the said turn-table, and that before the performance began a woman would walk a wire or rope stretched outside the tent; that Mrs. Nagel, the mother of the child, without knowing, as she testified, that there was such a thing as a turn-table near the ground where the exhibition was to take place, consented that her son Albert, about six years of age, might go to the ground in - company with his sister Alice, about eleven years old, that they went together in company with other children and that Alice, after remaining some time to see the woman [*665] walk the rope, concluded to return home before the performance came off, leaving her brother (who did not wish to return without seeing it) at a lemonade and refreshment stand, first exacting from him a promise that he would stay at that place till the performance was over and then return home. She also testified that she did not know of the existence of the turn-table or its character.
Under this evidence we think the court properly referred the question of cpntributory negligence to the jury, the rule being that, whether a person injured by the negligence of another, was exercising ordinary care, is a question to be determined by the jury, either where the facts are disputed, or where there is a dispute or reasonable doubt as to the inferences to be drawn from undisputed facts. Wharton on Neg., § 425. The correctness of the above rule has been repeatedly recognized by this court. Wyatt v. Railroad Co., 55 Mo. 485; Norton v. Ittner, 56 Mo. 352; 61 Mo. 592; Mauerman v. Siemerts, 71 Mo. 105. Erom the undisputed facts stated in defendants’ refused instruction in connection with other facts not stated, but in evidence, that neither Mrs. Nagel nor her daughter Alice had knowledge of the existence of the turn-table or its dangerous character, a different inference from that announced in the refused instructions might well be drawn.
The court also gave, over defendant’s objection, the following instruction for plaintiffs:
The jury are instructed that if you find for plaintiffs, you may, in your verdict, give them such damages, not exceeding $5,000, as you may deem fair and just, with reference to the necessary injury resulting to plaintiffs from the death of their son, and also having regard to the mitigating and aggravating circumstances attending the neglect complained of.
It will be observed that the instruction given is a literal copy of section 2123, supra, and such an instruction' was expressly approved by this court in the case of Owen v. Brockschmidt, 54 Mo. 289.
[*667]
Motion for rehearing overruled.