206 N.W. 435 | Minn. | 1925
Lead Opinion
The accident occurred in the evening, but at a time when, according to the evidence for plaintiff, the lobby was fairly well lighted by a "white way" street light just outside the building. She was about to visit a friend who lived in one of the upstairs apartments. She had been there before and knew how to get upstairs. The basement door was open and the other closed. Absent-mindedly she stepped into the former and fell as she was attempting to turn on an electric switch which she knew was at the foot of the second story stairway. Her story is this: "Yes, it was dark and I happened to go to that door and as I went in I tried to open the door and it was opened, and I tried to turn on the button to the light, knowing that there was an electric button there and as I stepped in I fell forward down to the basement."
We find in the case no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant. The owners of such premises are not required as a matter of due care to safeguard them so as to prevent at all hazards injuries to persons so oblivious of their surroundings as plaintiff must have been. But, if we assume negligence on the part of defendant, it is still impossible to absolve plaintiff from contributory negligence as a matter of law. "It was certainly her duty to look where she was stepping before she advanced across the threshold." Gaffney v. Brown,
Plaintiff relies on Gordon v. Cummings,
Nothing of that kind can be said here, for the merest inspection of the two doors involved would have indicated which led upstairs and which down. In McNaughton v. Illinois Cent. R. Co. the supreme court of Iowa held the defendant not liable where a passenger in its depot, intending to enter a toilet, opened a basement door by mistake and fell downstairs. Interesting though not controlling *313
is Johnson v. Ramberg,
Order affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
We concur in the conclusion that defendant was not negligent.