572 P.2d 107 | Ariz. Ct. App. | 1977
OPINION
Appellant Billy G. Ellis, Sr., was injured when he fell from a sawhorse while helping
It is axiomatic that in reviewing a judgment entered on a directed verdict for the defense, conflicting evidence must be viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiff. A motion by defendant for a directed verdict is regarded as admitting the truth of whatever competent evidence plaintiff has introduced, including the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. Nichols v. City of Phoenix, 68 Ariz. 124, 202 P.2d 201 (1949).
Although the parties in their arguments at trial and on appeal, and the trial court in its rulings, have spoken in terms of the duty of an owner or possessor of premises, the facts more properly present a question involving the supplier of a chattel.
Caristi testified that when he first assembled the sawhorse for use in cutting a board he was unable to hammer into place the metal wedges that would have made it sturdier. He abandoned the effort because it seemed steady enough without them for the job then at hand. A few days later, Ellis asked Caristi for something to stand on while working near the top of the carport wall, and Caristi produced the sawhorse from his storeroom. Ellis climbed on the sawhorse, and it collapsed less than a minute later.
From the foregoing, we believe there was sufficient evidence to present a jury question on whether Caristi was negligent in supplying Ellis with the sawhorse to stand on without either inserting the wedges or warning Ellis of their absence, and that the jury could reasonably have inferred that the absence of the wedges contributed to the collapse of the sawhorse and Ellis’s injuries.
Reversed and remanded for new trial.
. As noted by appellees, Moore v. Southwestern Sash & Door Co., 71 Ariz. 418, 228 P.2d 993 (1951), is couched in language of premises liability although it involved a power joiner. We do not conceive the duties of a land owner or occupant on the one hand and a chattel supplier on the other to be mutually exclusive, however. In Moore, where plaintiff was a business invitee, for all practical purposes those duties were identical.