Mills v. Charles Roberts Air Conditioning Appliances

Decision Date28 February 1963
Docket NumberNo. 7035,7035
Citation379 P.2d 455,93 Ariz. 176
PartiesJohn MILLS, a minor, by his guardian ad litem, Gordon Mills, and Gordon Mills, Appellants, v. CHARLES ROBERTS AIR CONDITIONING APPLIANCES, a corporation, and Ed Rhodes, Appellees.
CourtArizona Supreme Court

Moore & Moore, by Robert C. Moore, Phoenix, for appellants.

Shimmel, Hill & Kleindienst, by Rouland W. Hill, Phoenix, for appellees.

UDALL, Vice Chief Justice.

An action was brought in the Superior Court by John Mills, a minor, and Gordon Mills, his father, to recover for damages resulting from alleged negligence by the defendant. A jury verdict and a judgment in accordance with the verdict were rendered for defendant and against plaintiff. Plaintiff's motion for a new trial was denied, and from this the plaintiffs appeal.

On October 7, 1957, defendant Ed Rhodes, employee of defendant Roberts Air Conditioning Appliances, was called to the residence of Gordon Mills to service an air conditioning unit. He drove a truck on this call which was equipped with a tool compartment having a lid that when opened served as a work shelf at the right side of the truck. After using the self to work on the motor of the air conditioner Rhodes left it in its open position when he took the motor back to the house to test it. It was during this time that John Mills, a five year old son of the Mills family, ran around the front and along the right side of the truck and collided with the lowered shelf, striking his head against the same and causing considerable injury to himself. The facts were submitted to the jury seemingly upon the question of defendant Rhodes' negligence in leaving the shelf in its lowered position. Error is assigned in giving the following instruction:

'Inasmuch as the amount of caution used by the ordinarily prudent person varies in direct proportion to the danger known to be involved in the undertaking, if you find from the evidence that John Mills was injured by striking his head upon a shelf used and left projecting as a work bench by Ed Rhodes, then in determining whether Ed Rhodes acted negligently in so doing, you may consider the utility to the defendant, Ed Rhodes, of using the shelf as a work bench as compared to the degree of risk to others, of its injuring him.'

Plaintiff argues that the instruction is contrary to law in that it informs the jury that the law sanctions negligence of a defendant so long as his conduct is 'convenient' to himself, and in that it limited the jury to a matter of balancing 'convenience' to one person against danger to another person and told the jury that if the 'convenience' to defendant outweighed the danger to plaintiff then defendant was not negligent. 1

With regard to these arguments we quote from Harper and James, The Law of Torts, Vol. 2, Little, Brown and Company (1956) § 16.9:

'The broad test (of negligent conduct) * * * is what a reasonably prudent person would foresee and would do in the light of his foresight under the circumstances. (Emphasis supplied.) * * * The amount of caution 'demanded of a person by an occasion is the resultant of three factors: the likelihood that his conduct will injure others, taken with the seriousness of the injury if it happens, and balanced against the interest which he must sacrifice to avoid the risk.'

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'Outside the fields of illegal enterprise and of strict liability, the interest whose sacrifice is in question on the issue of negligence is the value of the particular act or omission which is challenged as negligent. * * * Liability for negligence is not based on engaging in dangerous but lawful activities though their dangerous character may call for greater precautions * * *.'

In the case of Crane v. Smith, 23 Cal.2d 288, 144 P.2d 356, 363 (1943) cited by the appellant the California Supreme Court said:

'As in all cases where a standard of conduct is involved, the reasonable character of the care depends upon whether the interference with the actor's own affairs is warranted by the other's danger. The broad concept underlying the determination of reasonableness of conduct in tort law is stated as follows: 'Where an act is one which a reasonable man would recognize as involving a risk of harm to another, the risk is unreasonable and the act is negligent if the risk is of such magnitude as to outweigh what the law regards as the utility of the act or of the particular manner in which it is done.'

* * * If the actor reasonably can accomplish the same result by other conduct which involves less opportunity for harm to others, the risk incurred by the manner of doing business which resulted in injury is clearly unreasonable. Vigneault v. Dr. Hewson Dental Co., supra, 300 Mass. pages 227, 228, 15 N.E.2d 185, 129 A.L.R. 95. So far as the present action is concerned, no particular interest of the appellant was advanced by maintaining the mill upon the aisle, and the utility of the machine would be as adequate were it to have been placed in the less dangerous position behind the counter. Consequently the risk to intermeddling children outweighs the utility to the proprietor of maintaining the machine upon the aisle, and its conduct in so placing the machine was not...

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2 cases
  • Morris v. Ortiz
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • February 16, 1968
    ...of negligent conduct is what a reasonable prudent person would or would not do under the circumstances, Mills v. Charles Roberts Air Conditioning Appliances, 93 Ariz. 176, 379 P.2d 455, and the principle is too well established for quibbling 'that before liability may be imposed for an act ......
  • Seifert v. Owen
    • United States
    • Arizona Court of Appeals
    • October 29, 1969
    ...duty arising therefrom turn on familiar questions of foreseeability and the reasonable man standard. Mills v. Charles Roberts Air Conditioning Appliances, 93 Ariz. 176, 379 P.2d 455 (1963). The answer to these questions is within the prerogative of the trier of facts. Figueroa v. Majors, 85......

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