Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants after jury verdict and attempts to appeal from an order denying new trial. *
Questions Presented
1. Refusal of certain instructions, particularly on res ipsa loquitur.
2. Admission of evidence of experiment.
Evidence
Plaintiff with her husband purchased some dishes on the fifth floor of Macy’s San Francisco store. Four cups, four saucers and four dinner plates were packed in a box and plaintiff proceeded to take the down escalator, carrying the
1. Instructions, (a) Res Ipsa Loquitur.
The court refused to instruct on this subject. It was plaintiff’s theory that under the evidence the accident could have been caused in either one of two ways, one, due to improper construction, that is, that the strip projected %th inch above the panel. Under this theory, res ipsa loquitur
“The California authorities on this subject are by no means consistent and clear. It is possible to find authority in this state for many different statements of the elements of the doctrine. (See cases collected and commented upon in
Leet
v.
Union Pac. R. R. Co.,
“Regardless of this apparent conflict, it is perfectly clear that, where the evidence of how and why the accident occurred is equally open and known to all parties, the doctrine has no application. As was stated in
Ybarra
v.
Spangard,
Whether the operator of an escalator is held to the duty of utmost care and diligence as is required of a common carrier or only of ordinary care has never been decided in California. There seems to be a split of authority on the subject elsewhere. (See
If plaintiff’s story was believed, namely, that a condition existed which caused the box being carried by plaintiff to wedge, then plaintiff proved negligence and the burden would fall on defendants of showing that the condition was not due to negligence.
The second way in which plaintiff claims that the accident may have happened was that of alleged improper maintenance, namely, that as plaintiff and her husband had no time to examine the strip to see its actual condition, the wedging may have been caused by the strip buckling or being somewhat above its natural position. The condition of the strip would be something within defendants’ sole knowledge and would entitle plaintiff to a proper instruction on res ipsa loquitur.
There are three conditions which must appear for the doctrine to apply. “The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur has three conditions: ‘(1) the accident must be of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of someone’s negligence; (2) it must be caused by an agency or instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant; (3) it must not have been due to any voluntary action or contribution on the part of the plaintiff.’ (Prosser, Torts, p. 295.) ”
(Ybarra
v.
Spangard,
If plaintiff’s story is believed all three conditions could have existed here. It should be pointed out that the third condition should not be confused with contributory negligence. It refers to the question of control and means that the doctrine will not apply if the plaintiff had control of the instrumentality. See
Zentz
v.
Coca Cola Bottling Co.,
Plaintiff proposed two instructions upon res ipsa loquitur. The first, plaintiff’s Number 13 (BAJI, 4th ed., No. 206-B) was improper in that in effect it instructed that as a matter of law the accident occurred as testified by plaintiff. (Incidentally, this instruction should never be given unless the cause of the accident is established as a matter of law.) The second, plaintiff’s Number 12 (BAJI, 4th ed., No. 206) would have required modification as otherwise it would have applied
Even if the instruction were proper, the failure to give it in this case was not prejudicial. A jury, under the evidence, could very well have found that even though, if the box wedged, defendants were unable to overcome a showing of negligence on their part, plaintiff herself, burdened as she was, was negligent in using the escalator instead of the elevator, or in failing to protect herself by holding on to the rails. This is a case in which for the jury to have found for plaintiff they would first have to believe plaintiff’s story that the box wedged and not merely struck against the panel or its strip. If they did not believe her story there could be no recovery in any event. If they did believe her story they would necessarily have to find that defendants were negligent in maintaining a strip which protruded even as slight as % inch beyond the panel. The negligence charged in the complaint and claimed to have been shown by the evidence was the installation and maintenance of the strip protruding ys inch beyond the panel and not being flush with it. It was conceded that the strip did so protrude. The court properly instructed the jury that defendants were under a duty of the utmost care and diligence for the safety of persons using the escalator and would be responsible for injury occasioned by even “the slightest neglect which human care and foresight might have guarded against ...” Thus, it is obvious that if the jury believed that the box was wedged by the protrusion of the strip it would necessarily have found defendants guilty of negligence. It obviously either did not believe plaintiff’s story, or, if it did, it also concluded that plaintiff, too, was guilty of negligence.
(b) Other Instructions.
Plaintiff’s proposed instruction No. 10 is based on language in
Schance
v.
H. O. Adams Tile Co.,
Plaintiff cannot complain of BAJI Number 101-H, for under the state of the record it is presumed that she offered it. (See cases cited in 3 Cal.Jur.2d 820, 821.) Moreover, the
2. Experiment.
Defendants’ escalator mechanic testified over objection to an experiment made by him in which he took a square, sharp edged box made of cardboard like a shoe box, approximately 18 inches square, and riding the escalator held it against the panel, and found that when it passed the strip in question “it just nudged me a little.” “The question of the similarity of conditions and the remoteness of experiments offered is one lying in the discretion of the trial court . . .”
(Miller
v.
Dollar Steamship Lines, Inc.,
The appeal from the order is dismissed. The judgment is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
Notes
In spite of the fact that appellate courts for many years have been announcing that an order denying a new trial is not appealable as the order is reviewable upon the appeal from the judgment, we continue to get purported appeals from such orders in a large percentage of eases.
