After the court had instructed the jury as to the degree of care requisite in a child, the following instruction was given:
“If you believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff, S. P. Simpson, had intelligence enough to know and appreciate the peril of *105getting on the defendant’s turn-table, in the manner the evidence ¡ shows he did; or if you believe he was warned by defendant’s employee not to get on said table, and that it was dangerous to do so, and said Simpson understood and appreciated such warning, but did nevertheless get on said turn-table, and was thereby the direct cause of his injury, you will find for defendant.”
This charge is assigned as error. It certainly was not erroneous.
After which the defendant asked the following instructions, which the court refused:
“ If you believe that plaintiff was attracted to the spot where the turn-table was located by the turning of an engine thereon by defendant’s employees, and, immediately upon the engine leaving the table, began to handle and attempt to ride on the table and received injury, and by means and in the manner which he had intelligence to know could be done at the time of the injury, then he cannot recover.”
Instruction hTo. 2, asked by defendant, is as follows:
“ If you believe, from the evidence, that plaintiff, when he moved the turn-table and started to jump on, knew that if he got his limb caught between the end of the beam of the turn-table and the wall of the pit in which it revolved, that it would be crushed, and that his foot slipped and his limb got caught in this way, then plaintiff was guilty of an act contributing to his injury and he cannot recover, although defendants may have also been guilty of negligence in leaving the table unfastened.”
It was not error to refuse the first instruction asked, for it was not justified by the evidence; for while the evidence does show that the turn-table had been used for the purpose of turning an engine but a short time before the injury was inflicted, it did not show that such use was so recent that the employees of the defendant had not had ample time to fasten it. The charge itself was confused, and so far as proper had been substantially given in the charge of the court.
As to the second instruction asked, the same may be said of that; and besides, although the child might have known that if its limb was caught in the designated place it would probably be injured, the charge excluded the idea that the absence of knowledge or intelligence to know and understand the peril of the limb being so caught was a material inquiry.
The third instruction asked and refused was substantially contained in the charge given by the court.
The fourth instruction asked was not justified by the facts in *106proof, and besides, it was objectionable in that it would have informed the jury that leaving a turn-table unfastened in a place where children by'its use might be injured, under the state of facts supposed in the instruction, was not negligence in the defendant. The question of due care was for the jury under all the facts, and Ú the case stated in the instruction was not such as would have i ^authorized the court, as matter of law, to instruct the jury that there liwas no negligence upon the part of the defendant in keeping its | turn-table unfastened when not in actual use.
The fifth charge asked and refused had been substantially given by the court, and it was not error to refuse to repeat it.
The sixth instruction was as follows: “ If you believe, from the evidence, that plaintiff was ten years old, and of fair average intelligence for his age, and that he went upon defendant’s premises without its permission or invitation, and in moving defendant’s turn-table, and attempting to jump thereon, received an injury, then '-^plaintiff was trespassing, and could not recover for such injury.”
The court did not err in refusing to give this instruction. The law fixes no certain age at which children are of sufficient intelligence to have imposed upon them the full degree of care incumbent ^ upon one of mature age, and in every case the question of intelligence of a child is one for the jury. R. R. Co. v. Stout, 17 Wall., 664; Thomp. on Neg., 1181, 1182.
It appears that the turn-table was uninclosed, and near a pond in which boys were accustomed to go for the purpose of fishing. ~_/The entry upon such a place was not a trespass in a child which would deprive it of the right to recover for an injury resulting from the attempted use of a dangerous machine to which children would be attracted for sport or pastime, .for it is the duty of every person to usejlue careJ¿o_ prevent i nj u ry to such persons, even from dangerous machinery upon the premises of the owner, if its character be such as to attract children to it for amusement.
The evidence is conflicting as to whether or not an employee of the defendant warned the plaintiff and other boys who were running the turn-table after the locomotive passed from it, that it was danJ -'gerous; but it does appear that the employee knew that they were. 1 playing with the turn-table, and that he took no steps to so fasten it 'that they could not'use it. The turn-table had no fastenings whatever, and, though almost constantly in use, there were times when it was not in use; and besides, it appears that boys were accustomed to use it at times when employees of the company were present.
The plaintiff himself, it seems, had played upon the turn-table *107upon former occasions. Under such state of facts it was for the j jury to determine whether the plaintiff used such care as is required/^ of one of his age. This question was fairly submitted to the jury, and though some of the charges asked by the defendant were proper,! as the matters covered by them were substantially embraced in thej charge given, it cannot be held that the failure to give them wasj such error as would justify a reversal of the judgment.
It is admitted that the damages are not so excessive as to justify a reversal, and the judgment must be and is affirmed.
Affirmed.,
[Opinion delivered June 29, 1883.]