Supreme Court of Canada
Ware's
Taxi Ltd. v. Gilliham, [1949] S.C.R. 637
Date:
1949-06-24
Ware's Taxi Limited And Elizabeth Doets (Defendants)
Appellants
and
Carol Ann Gilliham Et Al (Plaintiffs)
Respondents.
1949: April 26;
1949: June 24.
Present: The Chief Justice and Kerwin, Rand, Estey and Locke
JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF ALBERTA, APPELLATE
DIVISION
Motor vehicles—School Taxi—Negligence—Degree of care
required— Child failing through opened door—Safety devices—Supervision—
Allurement.
The five year old respondent fell out of appellant's taxi,
when the door opened, as she was being transported from school in pursuance of
a contract between the school and the appellant taxi company. The taxi was a 4
door sedan, the door had the standard push button lock and there was no
evidence of any defect in it or in the door. The trial judge and the Court of
Appeal found that the infant plaintiff or one of the other children in the car
must have played with the plunger and opened the door. There was evidence that
the plaintiff had on previous occasions fiddled with the push button. On the
day of the accident, while the car was stopped, the driver had noticed the
plaintiff playing with the button and had ordered her to cease and to stand
back from the door. The child obeyed and the driver made sure that the button
was down and the door securely locked and fastened. The trial judge dismissed
the action and the Appellate Division reversed his decision and ordered a new
trial limited to an assessment of damages.
[Page 638]
Held, affirming the Appellate Division (Rand and Locke
JJ. dissenting), that the appellant was negligent in conveying these children
in this 4 door sedan without safety devices and no greater degree of
supervision than could be exercised under the circumstances by the driver, as
the push button and the handle constituted an allurement to the children and a
reasonable man should have anticipated this attraction and the resulting
danger.
APPEAL from the judgment of the (Supreme Court of
Alberta, Appellate Division , reversing the dismissal of the action
by McLaurin J. and ordering a new trial limited to the assessment of damages.
L. R. Fenerty for the appellants.
A. W. Hobbs for the respondents.
The Chief Justice:—I
agree with my brother Estey and would dismiss the appeal with costs.
The judgment of Kerwin and Estey JJ. was delivered by
Estey J.:—This
is an action for damages arising out of an injury suffered by Carol Ann
Gilliham, daughter of the respondent Ernest James Gilliham, when she fell out of
a taxi owned by the appellant Ware's Taxi Limited while it was proceeding on
Centre Street near 2nd Avenue in the City of Calgary at about 5.15 p.m. on the
17th of June, 1946.
Carol, about five years of age, was attending the
Christopher Robin Kindergarten and Preparatory School in Calgary. Fees charged
by this school covered the cost and thereby it assumed the responsibility of
conveying the children to and from the school and their respective homes. In
February 1946 in discharge of that responsibility the school entered into a
contract with Ware's Taxi Limited to convey the children in the morning, at
noon and after school. The school is not a party to this action and therefore
any question as to its liability or the terms of the contract between it and the
appellant Ware's Taxi Limited is not in issue. The appellants, therefore,
accepted these children, from about three to six years of age (with possibly a
few up to eight), as passengers and were thereby under a duty to exercise
reasonable care in their conveyance. The appellant Ware's Taxi Limited employed
in this work
[Page 639]
some four or five taxis about four and a half hours per
school day. At other times these taxis were used in their regular taxi service.
The taxi in question was a 1942 4-door Dodge Sedan. Each of
the doors was equipped with the usual handle for opening as well as a push
button which when down locked the door in a manner that prevented it being
opened from either the inside or the outside. Miss Doets, an experienced driver
who had been transporting the children since the contract was made in February,
deposed that she was always careful to see that the push button was down before
starting the automobile.
It was under the terms of the above contract that on the
afternoon in question the appellant Elizabeth Doets, employed by appellant
Ware's Taxi Limited, was driving the taxi. She left the school with some seven
or eight children in the taxi. Two or three had already been left at their
respective homes leaving about five in the taxi when proceeding along Centre
Street Miss Doets noticed Carol playing with the push button on the right rear
door. She "told her to stand away from the door and she did." Miss
Doets at that time made certain the push button was down and continued. When
she had gone about a block that door opened and Carol fell out suffering the
injuries for which damages are here claimed.
In both the Trial and Appellate Court it has
been accepted as a fact that Carol or one of the other girls had raised the
push button and operated the handle permitting the door to open. The push
button, the handle and locking device on the door, so far as the evidence
discloses, were in good condition. When, therefore, the doors were closed and
the push button down the children were safe but if the push button was raised
and the handle moved the door would open.
The question is therefore whether the push button and handle
constituted an allurement to these children and should a reasonable man
anticipate both that they would attract children, who, if they meddled
therewith, would be in a position of peril. As stated by Lord Macnaghten in Cooke's
Case , is the push button and the handle
"attractive to children and dangerous as a plaything?"
[Page 640]
Every person must be taken to know that children are likely
to meddle with what comes within their reach, and this knowledge may ' impose a
relatively higher degree of duty to take care on any one who leaves that which
may be dangerous, if meddled with, in a place where it is probable that children
will reach it, than if there was no such probability.
Halsbury, Vol. 23, p. 584.
It must therefore toe assumed that Ware's Taxi Limited and
its employees were aware of the natural curiosity of children which would lead
them to investigate whatever might attract and was within their reach in the
automobile.
Hamilton, L.J., later Lord Sumner, in Latham v. R.
Johnson & Nephew Ltd. , stated:
What property must the chattel possess to make the
consideration of its attractiveness to children relevant? It must be something
which, from its nature or state, will draw children to it and induce them
heedlessly to put it into operation.
This push button was within easy reach of every child in the
rear seat of the automobile. Moreover, that it could be raised up and pushed
down was made evident to each child every time the driver of the automobile
opened or closed that door. The operation of the push button and the handle
were being constantly brought to their attention. In these circumstances it
would toe expected that the children would be drawn toward them and
"heedlessly to put them in operation."
Moreover, that there is a danger or a circumstance of peril
when children are placed in the rear seat of a 4-door sedan is supported by the
evidence. Some parents take the precaution to purchase the 2-door type. Other
parents, however, equip their 4-door sedans with safety devices and prior to
the war and again at least in 1947 some of these devices were upon the market.
Three of them were before the Court at the trial. An automobile could be
equipped with the most expensive of these for about $10. Moreover, these
devices were not complicated and anyone with mechanical ability could place a
workable device upon an automobile which would insure the door remaining closed
even if the children should meddle or play with the push button and the handle.
A representative of another taxi company called as a witness
said, "we have at times transported children" from two other
kindergartens without either a safety device
[Page 641]
upon the rear doors or any supervision. A taxi owner called
as a witness stated that he had transported children for two organizations in
Calgary, one for a period of two years and the other four months, using eight
cars and making four trips per day. He had only the push buttons without any
safety device upon the rear doors. The children, however, that he transported
were of ages from four to ten years. He stated that the younger children were
placed in the front seat with the driver, and then, "we do make a point to
have the old children look after the doors," or as he again stated,
"we put a couple of the older kiddies to watch it." The appellants
took the precaution of placing the younger children in the front seat but this
left children usually up to six years of age entirely by themselves in the back
seat with only such supervision as the driver in the circumstances might find
it possible to exercise.
The foregoing indicates that parents and at least one taxi
owner appreciate the need for either safety devices or supervision when young
children are being conveyed in a 4-door sedan. That these devices have been
developed and placed upon the market would suggest that the apprehension of
danger is generally recognized.
The possibility of an automobile rear door opening without
being meddled with is very remote. The precautions suggested above are taken
because of the propensity of small children to meddle with that which attracts
them. It would, therefore, appear that a reasonable man, assuming an obligation
to transport children from the ages of about three to six years in a 4-door
sedan equipped with push button and door handle, as in this case, would foresee
the possibility of these small children meddling or playing with the push
button and the handle and foresee the danger or peril consequent upon their
doing so and would take such precautions as would either prevent them playing
with the push button and the handle, or if they did so, remove the possibility
of dangerous consequences ensuing.
The conduct of Carol in meddling with the push button while
the automobile was en route on the day in question, and upon previous occasions
when she had reached her destination and was anxious to get out to play, was
[Page 642]
important only in so far as it may have
drawn the attention of appellants to this possible danger and to indicate the
natural propensity of children. She being a child of about five years of age
her conduct would not be accepted as constituting in law contributory
negligence. Merritt v. Hepenstal ; Beven on Negligence,
4th ed., p. 196.
The appellants also submitted that they were using taxi cabs
with standard or approved equipment which would negative the negligence here
alleged on their part. That they were using the standard or approved equipment for
the transportation of other than young children is not here in issue. Counsel
on appellants' behalf cited MacLeod v. Roe , where
the provision of standard equipment for customers was held under the
circumstances to be sufficient. In that case the principle applied in McDaniel
v. Vancouver General Hospital was followed. In the
latter the defendant acted in accord with the "general approved
practice." The appellant Ware's Taxi Limited had been operating under this
contract from February to June. A representative of another taxi company
deposed that they transported children "at times," while a taxi owner
who had the longest experience in transporting children did provide some
supervision. This evidence does not establish either that there is any
"general approved practice" or that there is what may be properly
described as standard equipment for the transportation of young children in
4-door sedan automobiles, and therefore it cannot be contended that the
appellant Ware's Taxi Limited was acting within the scope of either of the
foregoing cases.
Neither can the appellants' submission that they were acting
in accord with the custom among taxi companies in using this 4-door sedan in
the transportation of these children be accepted. It is true that evidence of
established practice or custom may be adduced for the purpose of rebutting an
allegation of negligence but in order to establish such it must have been a
practice over a long period of years. In the case cited by appellants of Rothschild
v. The Royal Mail Steam Packet Co. , Pollock, C.B., referred
to the particular mode of conveyance "for a great
[Page 643]
number of years," and in Hart v. Lancashire
and Yorkshire Ry Co. , the period was twenty years. The
evidence here does not establish any such custom or practice.
It would appear that Shrimpton v. Hertfordshire
County Council is more in point. There a child was
injured while being transported in a school conveyance. The jury found that it
was negligence not to provide supervision other than that of the driver. The
Lord Chancellor (Loreburn) stated at p. 147:
They (the jury) have found that it was not a reasonable and
proper way for the county council to convey children to school in this vehicle
without a conductor or some adult person to take care of them. It is said that
there is no evidence in support of this finding. To my mind it is a question
which any man of the world can answer by the exercise of his own common sense
and his knowledge of life.
It would therefore appear that the appellants in conveying
the children in the above described 4-door sedan, without safety devices and no
greater degree of supervision than could be exercised under the circumstances
by the driver, were negligent.
In reversing the judgment at trial dismissing respondents'
action the Appellate Court ordered a new trial limited to an assessment of
damages. In my opinion the judgment of the Appellate Division should be
affirmed and the appeal dismissed with costs.
The dissenting judgment of Rand and Locke JJ. was delivered
by
Rand J.:—The
facts out of which this appeal arises have been stated, and I will
not repeat them. It is, I think, unquestioned that from the standpoint of the
actual undertaking of the appellant there was no failure in performance. Both
the school authorities and the parents of the respondent, as well, I have no
doubt, as all the other parents, were fully aware that the children were being
carried in a taxicab with ordinary safety devices, though under the care and
oversight of a selected chauffeur. This had continued for over six months
during which the automobile would be at each home and at the school four times
on every school day.
The serious question then is whether the standard of care
imposed by law on such a relation called for further
[Page 644]
mechanical or other devices or an attendant. If the terms of
the actual undertaking were inadequate, the safety of a child could not be
jeopardized even with the consent of his guardians. The test is what the
reasonable and prudent person, if his mind was directed to the matter, would
accept as being all that could fairly be required in the circumstances. That
judgment, of course, would take into account the potential dangers from speed
and movement in the traffic conditions in which the automobile moved and the
means of safety by which the child was protected against them.
Ordinarily a reasonably intelligent parent can be taken to
foresee all risks likely or remotely possible to his young child in any
situation more sensitively than another and if we find parents uniformly,
freely and voluntarily accepting a course of conduct in others involving risks
to their young children, could there be a better test of the reasonableness or
sufficiency of the actual care in the particular case? That principle was applied
by this Court in the case of Ouellet v. Cloutier .
There, a young boy had gone to a neighbouring farm where threshing was in
progress. He was standing on the floor of a shed in the presence of the owner,
the defendant, a few feet from the machinery as it was slowing down at the end
of the day. In a moment of wilfulness he darted to the moving belt and in
endeavouring to slow it down caught his hand on the wheel and was injured. The
defendant was acquitted of negligence because he had acted as the boy's father
in the same situation would have done. Similarly here: the act of the child was
not the expectable or likely act: it was a conceivable act, no doubt, but as
done it was wilful and impulsive and in the circumstances beyond the range of
reasonable anticipation that called for added safeguard.
Now, although the acquiescence by the parents in the
carriage of their children in the manner adopted here may not be conclusive of
that standard, yet when associated as it is with the acceptance of similar
services both in Calgary and other places in Canada and in the absence of a
syllable of evidence gainst it, I feel bound to find its security to be reasonable:
it was adequate to the risks.
If it had been feasible by adding a convenient device that
had become generally used as an additional precaution,
[Page 645]
a new element in the realized standard would have been
added; hut although two or three mechanisms have appeared on the market, which
were claimed not to have been available during the time in question, the public
have not taken them up. The door, of course, might be locked with a key, but
there are flaws in all perfection of one dimension, and in that case there
would be not only intolerable inconvenience but also new dangers in case of
accident.
It is an everyday occurrence in Canada and the United States
that parents set off in their automobiles with young children in the rear seat.
It is frequent that little ones "pile in" for a short pleasure trip.
The doors uniformly, as in this case, have double catches and safety lock and
within that protection they enjoy the ride. It would confound a neighbour who
with the consent of a parent had taken a young child along with his own for a
short run to find himself the victim of a crippling lawsuit because in a moment
of wantonness the young child had opened a car door and fallen out. And the
duty of care toward such a child in that case would in this respect be the same
as in this. Settled over this physical security of lock and catches is the
presence of the adult who exercises the authority and oversight of the parent.
That was the case here. But the most assiduous surveillance is not absolute
insurance against impulse or perversity; there is always an irreducible margin.
With insignificant exceptions, children are sufficiently within control by what
was furnished here just as they are within their own home, and no other
accident of this nature, so far as known, had ever before happened in Alberta;
and the searches of counsel have not revealed a similar reported instance in
the many services of this sort carried on in the United States.
The injury to the child may be a permanent scar upon a young
life, but unfortunately in the multiplying risks and perils of this age these
misfortunes occasionally happen as their inevitable result. But I can imagine
no sounder or more realistic appraisal of reasonable safety than the long
continued acceptance by parents of protective conditions against hazards into
which they allow their children to be taken by strangers. Even hindsight
supports that
[Page 646]
here because for some time after the accident the child
continued to be carried under the same conditions in the taxi.
In the reasons of Ford, J.A. in the Court of Appeal ,
the principle of allurement as applied in Cooke v. Midland Railway
is invoked, but I am bound to say that I cannot see that it is appropriate to
the facts. In Latham v. Johnson , Hamilton, L.J.
enquires into the qualities or characteristics of the thing or article which
give to it the incriminating attractiveness. On p. 419 he says that the chattel
"must be something highly dangerous in itself, inherently or from the
state in which its owner suffers it to be;" and later that "it must
be something which, from its nature or state, will draw children to it and
induce them heedlessly to put it into operation." There is nothing of that
sort here. The safety catch is merely the small button which is pressed down to
prevent the handle of the door from being used and pulled up to release it: in
itself it is quite harmless. What opened the door was the pressing down of the
handle. I think it quite out of the question to speak of these ordinary and
familiar bits of mechanism, with which certainly the child here was thoroughly
well acquainted, as "fascinating and fatal." The principle is aimed
against setting a trap for children, treating them in this respect as governed
by an irresistible curiosity or desire or impulse, quite analogous to the
holding out of bait to an animal.
I agree, therefore, with McLaurin, J. who tried the case.
The appeal must be allowed and the action dismissed with costs throughout.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Cairns &
Howard.
Solicitors for the respondents: Patterson, Hobbs
& Patterson.