Opinion by
Henderson, J.,It is a well established rule that those • controlling property on, or immediately adjacent to, a public highway must have regard to the reckless and thoughtless tastes and traits of childhood. The owners of the premises are required in such cases to anticipate that children may use the highway, and in so doing be exposed to any unsafe object placed thereon. They are bound to know that young children are likely to be at play on the streets, and to make use of objects attractive for their exploits and games, and this responsibility has been held to attach in some cases where the offensive object was wholly upon the property of the defendant, and where the children injured were trespassers, as in Hydraulic Works Company v. Orr, 83 Pa. 332, and Duffy v. Sable Iron Works, 210 Pa. 326. “ Children, wherever they go, must be expected to act upon childish instincts and impulses ; 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 : ” Chief Justice Cooley, in Power v. Harlow, 57 Mich. 107 (23 N. W. Repr. 606). Circumstances may beget duties which would not ordinarily be implied, and when they are shown to exist the questions arising are questions of fact, not of law: Schilling v. Abernethy, 112 Pa. 437. The decision in Hydraulic Works Co. v. Orr, 83 Pa. 332, has been criticised, and the soundness of its reasoning is stoutly combated by Chief Justice Mitchell, in the dissenting opinion in Duffy v. Sable Iron Works, 210 Pa. 326, but solely on the ground that a landowner is not liable for an injury to a trespasser from an excavation or obstruction on his *613own land, unless it is so near the public highway that a traveler lawfully using the highway may accidentally or without intended trespass fall into it. All of the cases agree that where the object is upon the highway and is of such a character that it should have been reasonably anticipated that it would be used by children in the course of their play, and that owing to its position, form or condition it would be dangerous to them when so engaged, the owner would be guilty of negligence if he failed to guard against the contingency of accident. This principle is recognized in Rodgers v. Lees, 140 Pa. 475, and Guilmartin v. Philadelphia, 201 Pa. 518, upon which the appellant relies. In the former case the child who was killed was a trespasser, and engaged in an act which was obviously dangerous. The object to which he clung was moving at the time, and his act was one which ordinary prudence might not have foreseen. In the latter case the child was injured by a falling gate on which he had climbed. The city was not required to anticipate dangers resulting from the improper use of objects safe in themselves, and for the use for which they are designed. In the same case, however, it was said: “ If an object was in itself dangerous or might become dapgerous if a child chanced to set it in motion while playing with it, or by running against it, there was a duty on the city to take such precaution as was reasonable, under the circumstances, to prevent injury by it.” Marsh v. Giles, 211 Pa. 17, turned upon the point that the act of the defendant in placing the stone against the pole was not the proximate cause of the injury; that that was the immediate consequence of the intervening act of the plaintiff’s companion in making a use of the stone not likely to have been anticipated. The injury could as well have occurred if the plaintiff’s companion had used a billet of wood or a stone picked up from the ground. The question presented to the referee at the trial below was whether the action of the children in playing upon the pile of barrels was one of the things which might have been expected to occur, and against the disastrous result of which the defendant was bound to guard. This question was one of fact. The defendant was not authorized to use the sidewalk as a place for storage of barrels. They were not there temporarily in the course of transfer from the street to the brewery, or from the brewery *614to the street. The same barrels did not remain all the time, but the evidence tends to show that barrels of the same character were kept there much of the time in the prosecution of the defendant’s business. This use of the street being unlawful, he has not the excuse that he was in the exercise of his own right in so obstructing the highway. The plaintiff was scarcely more than five years of age. He had slipped away from the home of his aunt, who had temporary care of him, while she was engaged in the house and was injured within a very short time thereafter. The playful instincts of himself and his companions took them to the place, and it does not seem improbable that they should have done just what was done. The barrels were empty, were not in any way secured, and were so arranged in tiers as to invite the children to the enterprise in which they engaged. The referee found that the pile of barrels was of such a character that the defendant should have anticipated that children would climb upon them in their play, and that the manner of piling was such as to render it dangerous to children who would be tempted to play thereon. This finding is warranted by the evidence and is conclusive against the defendant. It cannot be declared as a matter of law that children of such tender age would not be tempted in their plays to climb to the top of the pile, nor is there anything in the facts to indicate that they must have seen that such action was manifestly dangerous. Some' situations might be obviously dangerous to persons of their years, as the track of a railroad when a train is at hand, or the middle of a highway when a rapidly moving team is closely approaching, or the ascending ball in Marsh v. Giles, but we have nothing of that kind here. .It was not unlawful for the children to play upon the street, and it cannot be said that they had no business there. The owner of the premises owed them the duty to provide against the consequences of their inexperience and youthful inclination to play upon his property placed on the sidewalk in a position which might attract them. The referee arrived at a satisfactory conclusion on the evidence presented, and the facts being established the law declares the liability.
The judgment is affirmed.