7.11 CARE REQUIRED OF CHILDREN (Approved 5/91)
A. In
General (7 years and Older)
A
child, old enough to be capable of negligence, is required to act with the same
amount of care as children of similar age, judgment and experience. In order for you to determine whether a child
has acted negligently, you should take into consideration the child's age,
intelligence and experience. Also you
must consider the child's capacity to understand and avoid the danger to which
he/she was exposed in the actual circumstances and situation in this case. You, the jury, must decide the factual
question of whether this child was comparatively negligent.
B. Where Child Under 7 Years
There
is a presumption in the law that a child under the age of seven years is not
capable of acting negligently. You may
reject this presumption only if the party who is claiming the child was
negligent proves that this particular child had the experience and the capacity
to avoid the danger which was present in this situation.
If
you decided that this child had the capacity to act negligently then you must
review the facts to see if the child failed to use that amount of care to avoid
the danger which should have been exercised by children with like experience
and intelligence.
Cases:
Bush v. N.J. & N.Y. Transit Co., Inc., 30 N.J. 345 (1959); Dillard v. Fue,
65 N.J. Super. 234 (App. Div. 1961).
NOTE TO JUDGE
Between the time in life when a person is
incapable of exercising the care and judgment necessary to avoid and avert
danger, and the time when such person is in law an adult, responsibility
depends on matters of fact and in this transition period such person may or may
not be guilty of contributory negligence.
The degree of care required of a child old enough
to be capable of negligence, is such as is usually exercised by persons of
similar age, judgment and experience. In
order to determine whether such a child has been guilty of contributory
negligence, it is necessary to take into consideration the age of the child,
and its experience and capacity to understand and avoid the danger to which it
is exposed in the actual circumstances and situation under investigation.
Nichols v. Grunstein, 105 N.J.L. 363 (E. & A. 1929); Dillard
v. Fue, 65 N.J. Super. 234 (App. Div. 1961).
As to children under 7, New Jersey follows the rebuttable
presumption rule. Thus in Bush v.
N.J. & N.Y. Transit Co., 30 N.J. 345 (1959), the Supreme Court
held:
The question of capacity or
incapacity is simply a factual inquiry, and is whether the particular child has
the capacity to be contributorily negligent, i.e., act unreasonably under the circumstances, in light of the
age, training, judgment and other relevant factors applying to the child, and
the test to be applied is that applicable to any other question of fact. The trial judge is first to view the matter
and if he is of the opinion that the child, after a consideration of all
relevant factors, does not have the capacity to be contributorily negligent and
that reasonable men could not disagree, he then decides the question of
capacity as a matter of law (emphasis added). But if the trial judge feels that reasonable
men can disagree on the question of incapacity even though he himself would
decide for or against incapacity, then he must allow the jury to decide the
question of incapacity. The jury, if it finds the particular child at the time
of the accident had capacity to be negligent, must then decide whether the
particular child was negligent. Id.
354
After a consideration of the
authorities we adopt the view that a child of less than seven years of age is rebuttably
presumed (emphasis added) to be incapable of negligence and hence the issue
may not (emphasis added) be submitted to the jury in the absence of
evidence of training and experience from which the jury could infer that the
child was capable of understanding and avoiding the danger of injury involved
in the circumstances of the case. . . . If
evidence of capacity is introduced, then the trial judge must determine if such
evidence is sufficient so that reasonable men might disagree concerning the
question of whether the child had the capacity to perceive the task and avoid
the danger to himself. If the answer is
in the affirmative and if there is further evidence that the child did not act
in a manner which would be expected of a child of similar age, judgment and
experience, then the question of contributory negligence must be submitted to
the jury. Id.
at 358
N.B. The
trial judge must instruct the jury that there is a presumption of incapacity,
that it is first to determine whether there is such evidence sufficient to
overcome the presumption of incapacity and to render the child capable of being
contributorily negligent, and, then, if the jury finds that the child is
capable, it must determine whether the child was contributorily negligent under
the facts of the particular case.
Additional factors which might be introduced to
show that a child was capable of negligence whereas the average child the same
age would not be, are, for example, his/her attending school, his/her being taught
traffic safety regulations, his/her experience in caring for himself/herself in
traffic, and any other evidence of the child's physical and mental
capabilities.
Source: https://njcourts.gov/attorneys/civilcharges.html
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