Defendants appeal from a judgment in a personal injury action, after jury trial, in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $10,000.
Question Presented.
Does the evidence show as a matter of law that defendants ' premises were not negligently maintained ?
Evidence.
Defendants own and operate a coffee shop on leased premises in Vallejo, known as Twins Coffee Shop. Adjacent to the building in which the coffee shop is operated is a small parking lot maintained by defendants for use of its patrons. About 3 feet out from the building is a bumper rail, leaving an asphalt paved area
Negligence.
Defendants apparently concede that plaintiff was an invitee and that their duty towards him was that of a possessor of land towards an invitee. As said in Johnston v. De La Querra Properties, Inc. (1946)
The occupier’s duty to an invitee is one of due care under all the circumstances. He must use care not to injure the invitee by negligent activity, and must warn him of perils actually known to the occupier. The duty extends to defects in structures erected by a prior possessor. The occupier also owes the invitee the duty of care of inspecting his premises and of discovering dangerous conditions. In short, the occupier has the duty to take reasonable care to make the/premises reasonably safe. (Harper and James, The Law of Torts, § 27.12, p. 1487; 35 Cal.Jur.2d, Negligence, § 108, p. 615; Powell v. Vracin (1957)
An invitee cannot recover, however, where the danger was obvious or there was contributory negligence. (35 Cal.Jur.2d, Negligence, § 108, p. 615.)
Defendants contend that “ [a]s a matter of law there was no evidence from which this jury could have found that this plaintiff’s injury resulted from the maintenance of a dangerous or defective condition for which these appellants would be liable.” This contention is based upon the claim that the faucet protruding 4 to 5 inches above the pavement was so obvious as to bring the case as a matter of law within the above mentioned rule that where the danger is obvious the occupier is not liable even though the condition is a dangerous or defective one.
11 It is ordinarily a question of fact whether in particular circumstances the duty of care owed to invitees was complied with, ... whether the particular danger was obvious, whether an invitee was eontributorily negligent, or whether the defect was trivial.” (35 Cal.Jur.2d, Negligence, § 134, pp. 648-649; accord: Harper and James, supra, § 27.13.) In Powell v. Vracin, supra,
There is one line of cases, however, in which the obviousness of the condition does not afford the defendants relief from liability. That line consists of those eases where “people would not in fact expect to find the condition where it is, or they are likely to have their attention distracted as they approach it, or, for some other reason, they are in fact not likely to see it, though it could be readily and safely avoided if they did.” (Harper and James, supra, § 27.13, pp. 1491-1492.) Thus, there may be negligence in maintaining a condition which is physically obvious but in a place where a person might reasonably be expected not to see it. In Hodge v. Weinstock, Lubin & Co. (1930)
It cannot be said as a matter of law that this faucet was so obvious that it could be reasonable to assume that persons using the strip would necessarily observe it. It was located directly in front of a large window in the wall of the café. This window reached within about a foot of the pavement. Immediately inside the window was a dining table and four chairs. It is obvious from the photographs in evidence that the attention of a person using the strip might be diverted by the view through this window of the interior of the café and the persons sitting at the window table, if any. There was a water tank, waist high, just beyond the window protruding about 1% feet from the wall. The gaze of persons using the strip might well be focused upon this tank in order that they might avoid hitting it. It is obvious, too, that because of the roof overhang, persons would use the strip in the event of rain, and that their attention could be thereby diverted from the pavement. These were reasonably foreseeable matters. At the very least, they were debatable matters to be resolved by a jury, and such that it cannot be said as a matter of law that persons using the strip must necessarily under all conditions see the protruding faucet. Thus the exception to the rule as to invitees that the occupier of land is not liable for a dangerous condition which is obvious would
In order to prevail on this appeal, defendants must establish that no reasonable person would conclude that it was a negligent act to permit a faucet to stick up 4 to 5 inches from the surface of a paved area and 5 to 6 inches from the outside wall of a restaurant building, where the area was about 3 feet wide, sheltered by an overhang, led around the building to defendants’ parking lot and, on rainy days, provided the only sheltered access to that parking lot. Defendants would have to establish in addition that a reasonable juror could not find (a) that persons would be likely to use this path in foul weather, (b) that a distraction was provided by the window, the water tank or the rain which caused the plaintiff to fail to watch where he was going (he testified that as he turned the corner he was struck in the face by the rain), or (c) that it was reasonable for the plaintiff to be close to the side of the building on a rainy day, or (d) that defendants knew or in the exercise of normal care should have known of factors (a), (b) and (c).
It is the province of the jury to ascertain, from their experience and from the evidence, whether the act or omission of the defendants was one which did not amount to a reasonable exercise of care under the circumstances. This is not the function of an appellate court except where reasonable minds could reach but one conclusion from the evidence.
The eases cited by defendants are easily distinguishable from the one at bench.
Blodgett v. B. H. Dyas Co., supra,
In Ford v. Riverside City School Dist. (1953)
In Weddle v. Heath (1931)
In Holcombe v. Burns (1960)
In Goodman v. Raposa (1957)
In Whiting v. City of National City (1937)
More nearly analogous to the situation in our case are the situations in the following cases:
Danisan v. Cardinal Grocery Stores, Inc. (1957)
Powell v. Vracin, supra,
Woodard v. Bank of America, supra,
Defendants contend that they are relieved from liability because no similar accident had ever happened before and hence defendants had never been notified of danger from the position of the faucet. This is a non sequitur. The lack of a prior accident would not excuse liability if the dangerous condition should reasonably have been known by the occupier. Here, although the faucet had been installed by the owner of the property prior to its occupancy, defendants had occupied the property for a number of years and, as we have hereinbefore pointed out, it is reasonable to conclude that they should have known that the maintenance of the faucet under the circumstances constituted a hazard to persons who would be using the strip.
The judgment is affirmed.
Sullivan, J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
Notes
A motion for new trial by defendants was denied,
Hereinafter referred to for convenience as “the strip.”
While in their answer to the complaint, defendants alleged that the strip was not intended to be used as a sidewalk, merely being a necessary space between the front bumpers of automobiles and the wall to prevent automobiles from caving in the wall and that plaintiff assumed the risk of walking in it, they make no contention on this appeal that the question of whether defendants knew or should have known that the strip would be used by persons parking in the area, and whether there was an invitation by defendants, express or implied, to plaintiff to use said strip under the circumstances, were not jury questions which the jury decided adversely to them.
We are not concerned here with the question of contributory negligence. That issue was resolved by the jury and no question concerning it is raised on the appeal.
