117 Va. 777 | Va. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 14th day of January, 1913, the defendant in error (plaintiff in the court below) entered the city market, which was operated by the plaintiff in error (defendant below), for the purpose of making certain purchases therein, and upon leaving the market, passing through the western door at the southern end of the market building to the street, her foot or heel came in contact with an obstruction in the doorway, or her foot slipped on the concrete walk to the door, causing her to fall and to sustain thereby a broken hip. She thereupon instituted this action against the city to recover damages for the injury, and upon the trial of the cause the jury rendered a verdict in her favor and awarded her damages to the amount of $5,000, which verdict the court refused to set aside and rendered judgment for the plaintiff thereon, to which judgment this writ of error was allowed the defendant city.
During the progress of the trial there was but one exception to the rulings of the court, which is to its action
Viewing the evidence certified in the record as upon a demurrer thereto by the defendant, the facts are as follows: Tbe defendant maintains under its charter a certain market house within the corporate limits of the city, and leases, for a consideration, stalls, or stands, in said market to divers persons. The building has a concrete floor, and at the southern end thereof, facing on Tazewell street, there are two doors, separated by a post. Along the line where the floor and doorway meet, the floor has sunken and broken away from the western doorway to such an extent that the floor, as variously estimated by the witnesses, is from about an inch and five-eighths to two and a half inches lower than the doorway, at the eastern side of the western door, which is at the center post between the western and the eastern doors, and five-eighths of an inch at the western side of the western door; m other words, there is a break in the line of the doorway, extending from the western side of the door to the eastern side thereof, causing the doorway to be higher than the floor five-eighths of an inch at the western side of the door, and from an inch and five-eighths to two and a half inches at the eastern side of the door—that is, the break in the line of the doorway begins at a depth of five-eighths of an inch at the western side of the western door and increases in depth so that the doorway is higher than the floor by from one and five eighths of an inch to two and one-half inches at the eastern side of the doorway, where it connects with the post that separates the two doorways and upon which the
On the date mentioned, at 11 o’clock a. m., the plaintiff, as she had done many times before, entered said market building and while in the building stopped at the stand of one Breslauer, which was immediately within the building near the western end of the western door, and in leaving the building through the western doorway, her foot or heel came in contact with the ridge in the doorway or she slipped from some cause and fell heavily on her side and suffered an impacted fracture of the hip.
Her declaration in this action contains two counts, the gravamen of the first being, that the defendant had carelessly and negligently permitted the floor of its market building immediately near the western door, on the southern side of the building, to become in a dangerous, defective and unsafe condition, which condition had prevailed at this point for some two to three years with the knowledge of the defendant’s authorities. The second count avers that the floor of said market building, upon which the plaintiff was required to walk, on the day and year that she sustained the injuries for which she sues, was in a dangerous, dilapidated and unsafe condition, of which condition the defendant had due notice for a period of three weeks prior to the injury of the plaintiff, in that the southern end of said market building contained refuse matter that was allowed to accumulate upon the concrete floor of the building, rendering the same slippery to walk on, by reason whereof the plaintiff, while walking in and upon the floor of said building, as she had the right to do, fell, etc., by reason whereof she sustained the injuries she complains of.
“The court instructs the jury that a municipal corporation owning, controlling and letting out stalls in its market building, is liable for the management and use thereof to the same extent and in the same manner as a private person ; the city is not an insurer of the safety of the premises, but is charged only with the duty of keeping the premises in a reasonably safe condition for the use of those who, while exercising reasonable care for their own safety, have a right to use the premises; the court further instructs the jury that a municipal corporation is not an insurer against accidents in its market building. It is sufficient if the floors and exits of its market building are in a reasonably safe condition. It is not expected and is not required that a city should keep the floors and exits of its market building at a perfectly level and even surface, nor absolutely free from refuse matter. Slight obstructions, or the accumulation of refuse matter for a brief period of time, may not be preventable, and the only duty imposed upon the defendant is that it use ordinary care to prevent the same; and, if the jury believe from the evidence that the said defendant, the city of Norfolk, used ordinary care in the maintenance and use of its market house, to keep the same in a reasonably safe condition, then they shall find for the defendant.”
Other of the instructions given' for the defendant defined the duty imposed by law upon a person using the market building of a city, and told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the plaintiff knew, or should have known, of the defect in the doorway of the defendant’s market building, of which she complains in her decía
It is conceded that these instructions are to be taken as the law- of this case, and they submitted it, upon the evidence, to the jury fairly and as favorably to the theory of the defense as could have been reasonably asked, leaving it for the jury to determine whether or not the defendant had been guilty of the negligence charged in plaintiff’s declaration, and if the jury found that the defendant was guilty cf the negligence charged and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, then they were to ascertain and determine, from the evidence, whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as barred her of a recovery of damages for her injuries in this action.
The first contention of the defendant here is that the judgment of the trial court upon the verdict of the jury should be reversed because the existence of the alleged defect in the doorway of its market house, by reason of which plaintiff sustained the injury for which she sues, was not, as a matter of law, negligence; and that, as a matter of law, the defendant was not negligent in allowing the defective condition in the doorway of its market house, as alleged in the declaration and testified to by the witnesses in the
If, however, the same rule obtained in this case that applies to cases in which the obstruction was on a public street or highway, under well settled principles of law, it is peculiarly the province of the jury, where the facts are disputed, as to the nature, size and character of the obstruction, to say whether or not the obstruction or defect complained of is of such a character as to render the municipality liable for damages sustained by a person injured thereby. City of Richmond v. Gentry, 111 Va. 160, 68 S. E. 274; Same v. Lambert, 111 Va. 174, 68 S. E. 276, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 380.
It is furthermore well settled by the Supreme Court of the United States and this court, by practically an unbroken line of decisions, that negligence only becomes a question of law to be taken from the jury when the facts are such that fair-minded men can only draw one inference therefrom. If fair-minded men, from the proofs submitted, may honestly differ, as to the negligence charged, the question is not one of law, but one of fact to be de
In the instant case, the plaintiff, testifying in her own behalf, does not undertake to state the nature, size or character of the defect in the floor or doorway in the market house which she alleges was the cause of her injuries, but in substance relates just how the accident happened to her as follows: That she went to Breslauer’s stand in the market on the day of the accident, and on leaving, just as she got to the door her left heel caught, and she tried to catch herself and her right foot slipped out on some rubbish which was lying there, and threw her on her left side and broke her hip. “That is all I can say. I was picked up by two men in the market.” She then relates the character and extent of the injury resulting from her fall, the length of time she was kept in bed by reason of her injuries, the costs and expenses incurred in endeavoring to get healed and cured of her injuries, and that she was lame, disabled and would continue so during her life. She further stated that she had frequently visited the market, but could not recall that she had often before gone out of the market through the door where she fell, and had no reason on this occasion for being particulai’ly careful or to look down where she was walking, never having noticed the defect in the floor or doorway which caused her to fall. She was asked on cross-examination: “Do you know what it (her left foot) caught in?” Ans. “No. I could not tell you that, but something was there
It has been repeatedly ruled by this court, that while it has the right to pass upon the evidence in a case where it has to be considered as upon a demurrer thereto, it will not reverse the judgment of the trial court and grant a new trial, because the verdict is contrary to the evidence or without evidence to support it, and not in a doubtful case, merely because the court, if on.the jury, would have given a different verdict. Arminius Chem. Co. v. Landrum, 113, Va. 7. 73 S. E. 459, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 272, Ann. Cas. 1913-D, 1075; Cardwell v. N. & W. Ry. Co. supra, and authorities there cited.
Upon the careful examination that has been given the evidence in this case, in the light of the authorities cited,
The judgment of the court of law and chancery is affirmed.
Affirmed.