124 So. 907 | Ala. | 1929
Appellee's complaint alleged that she had been caused to fall down stairs and suffer injuries by the negligence of appellant in allowing water to accumulate and remain on the steps of the building occupied in part by appellant and in a different part of which appellee was employed, rendering them wet, slippery, and dangerous. Defendant appeals.
Two questions are presented: (1) Whether appellant was entitled to the general affirmative charge duly requested; and (2) whether the court erred in admitting evidence of appellee's average earnings as tending to prove the proper measure of damages.
1. Appellant holds that there was no scintilla of evidence going to show that it controlled or was responsible for the condition of the building at the point where appellee was hurt, viz. the steps. Appellant was a tenant in the building in which the accident occurred, holding under lease five floors, including the ground floor. There were other tenants on the ground floor whose offices, like appellant's, opened on the corridor leading from Twenty-First street, through the building, to the elevator, or to the lobby in front of the elevator, as the witnesses spoke of it, but whether these other tenants held under appellant or the owner of the building does not appear. The accident in which appellant suffered occurred on a stairway of four steps in the midst of the corridor leading from the east entrance to the elevator. We state the situation as we are able to gather it from the bill of exceptions. Perhaps the jury had a better understanding of the geography of the locus in quo than we have, for they had before them a blueprint of the ground floor, which is not reproduced in the bill of exceptions; but their superior knowledge of the situation is hardly more than a surmise. Appellee was employed on the sixth floor of the building, and was on her way to the elevator on the first floor, when, as she stepped down on the first step of the stairway, she slipped and fell. Her testimony was that it had rained hard an hour or two previously, and that, after she fell, she noticed for the first time water on the floor and on the step.
After repeated readings of the bill of exceptions, we are unable to locate evidence upon which the jury may have visited responsibility for the condition of the steps upon defendant, and appellee appears to be aware of this deficiency in her case, for her final recourse is to circuit court rule 35, Vol. 4 Code, p. 907, and to the opinion of the Court of Appeals in Sovereign Camp v. Dennis,
2. We think it should be added, in view of another trial that may follow, that the court committed no error in admitting evidence of appellee's average earnings by way of commissions. It has been held by this court that a party may not, in an action on contract, recover the profits he may have lost by reason of the interruption of his business. Central of Georgia v. Weaver,
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.