The appellant prosecutes this appeal to reverse ¡a judgment against it for damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of its servants. The material facts are as follows:
Appellant was engaged in.manufacturing lumber in the city of Hot Springs, and had a dry shed abutting on one of the streets of the city. Its .servants loaded a two-wheel truck with .lumber ranging in length from eight to •sixteen feet. The truck was so loaded that its two ends were nearly evenly balanced, but the rear end was heavier so that if it was placed on the ground the front end would extend above the ground four or five feet. The truck-was left standing in the door of the dry kiln abutting on the street with the front end extending into the street about three feet. Roy McDaniel, a boy of nine years of age, was walking along the street going to a store on an errand for his mother. He saw the loaded truck and reached up and caught hold of the front end of it. This caused the truck to fall over and crush 'him to the ground whereby his leg was broken and he was otherwise severely injured. ,
In conducting its business appellant’s truck would be carried to the door of the dry kiln and a mule hitched to two wheels would be backed up against the truck and the truck fastened to these wheels with a hook. The lumber would rest on a bolster of the wheels to which the mule was hitched and would be fastened down. When the truck was being hauled away other trucks would be loaded and carried to the door of the dry shed so that they could be attached to the wheels drawn by the mule.
Witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the proper way to load these trucks was to load them more heavily in front and place -a prop under the front end. Witnesses for the defendant said the proper way to load them was to place the heavier part of the load on the rear end so that end would rest on the ground and the front end would be above the ground, so that the mule attached to the front wheels might be more easily backed under the truck. Be that as it may, the undisputed evidence was that the loaded truck was placed in the door of the dry shed abutting on the street and that its front end extended out into the street about three feet and was about four feet above the ground and that the load of lumber on the truck was so evenly balanced that it required but a slight exertion to pull the front end down.
The only contention made by counsel for appellant is that there was no actionable negligence on the part of the appellant and that the verdict should have been directed in its favor. The language of Cooley, J., in the case of Powers v. Harlow, 53 Mich. 507, 51 Am. Rep. 154, is peculiarly applicable to the facts in this case. The. learned justice said: “ Children, wherever they go, must (be expected to act upon childish instincts and impulses; and 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.”
The evidence shows that the street abutting on the dry shed of the appellant where appellee was injured was. not a very much traveled street by footmen, but appellant, in the exercise of that care which the law requires of an ordinarily prudent person in the conduct of his business, was bound to anticipate that children as well as adults were likely to be walking along the street and that a. child of tender years might be tempted to play with a loaded truck or to indulge in such childish pranks .as the one in question. The .child was upon the street where it had a right to be, and appellant should not only have anticipated that 'Children were likely to walk upon the street but that they were also likely to turn aside from travel and play .and meddle with a loaded truck which extended out into the street. Having left the truck there heavily loaded with lumber with the front end sticking up and the load on the truck so nearly evenly balanced that only a slight exertion was necessary to tilt it down, we think the negligence of the appellant was a question for the jury. The evidence shows that the truck had been standing there in that position for .about one-half hour and one of the servants of the appellant stated that when it was first placed there a prop was placed under the front end of it, but that this prop had been taken away before the injury occurred.
For a 'discussion of the principle' of law bearing on the question, see Busse v. Rogers (Wis.), 64 L. R. A. 183; Rachmel v. Clark, 205 Pa. 314; Thompson on the Law of Negligence, Vol. 1, § 1048.
No objection has been raised to the instructions of the 'court. The ease was properly submitted to the jury on the question of negligence of the appellant and contributory negligence of the appellee. The judgment will be affirmed.