221 A.D. 668 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The appellant’s grievance is confined to errors in the charge. The defendant is a hotelkeeper; the plaintiff became a guest of this hotel on the 2d of August, 1924. The following' Tuesday evening, August fifth, while going down the main stairway, she fell, receiving the injuries of which she complains. She testifies that her heel seems to have caught in the carpet; she swayed and fell. She then saw no defect in the carpet, nor did she know the step from which she fell. The next morning her nephew examined this stairway. He says in one place he found the nap was worn and in another place that there was a hole in the carpet; that it
The plaintiff presented a number of requests depending upon the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. We do not think that doctrine has any application to the case; it is simply a rule of evidence in effect that the established circumstances may justify an inference. The defect, if it existed, was a defect susceptible of proof by any observing witness; it and its cause were not matters of inference; they were matters of direct proof and direct proof thereof was offered. Nor was the accident one which would not in the ordinary course happen if the defendant having charge had used ordinary care. It is not uncommon for a person to fall down stairs when there is no defect in the stairway or its covering. (See Marceau v. Rutland R. R. Co., 211 N. Y. 203; Francey v. Rutland R. R. Co., 222 id. 482; Griffen v. Manice, 166 id. 188.)
The plaintiff excepted to so much of the charge as stated in words or effect “ that there was no evidence that this injury [probably defect] had existed prior to the time that the accident happened; ” and she requested the court to charge that notice of the existence of the defect can be inferred by the jury from the fact of. its having been repaired, or attempted to be repaired, which request the court declined and plaintiff excepted thereto. We think there was no prejudicial error either in this charge excepted to or in the refusal to charge as requested.
There was in fact no direct proof that any dangerous condition existed in this step until after the accident. Assuming that there had been a worn condition of the carpet, it had been repaired. There is no suggestion that any tack was loose, nor that any threads or edge of the carpet about this hole was loose until after the accident. As above stated, a person may fall on a stairway without any defect in a step thereof. A heel catches on the edge of the stair, or the carpet, and a person falls. For all the direct evidence in this case it may be that it was the plaintiffs heel which loosened the threads of the warp which the nephew says were loose, although they laid flat. It may be that an inference could be drawn that a person would be more likely to fall if there were a loose edge in the .carpet than if there were not; and the court fairly submitted to the jury the question whether or not a dangerous condition did -exist on this step at the time of the accident. But, if this were the fact, the jury must find it by inference and upon indirect, not direct, evidence. The request to charge that notice of the existence of a defect can be inferred by the jury is limited by the words, “ from the fact of its having been repaired, or attempted to be repaired.” This does not refer to repairs after the accident; tneré
The charge of the court, taken as a whole, was a fair presentation to the jury of the case and the questions involved. I do not think the jury was misled by it. The result was justified by the record. The defendant’s evidence tending to show that there was no defect in this carpet is in my view much more persuasive than plaintiff’s evidence that .there was a defect. It was a Brussels carpet; it had been used but one" year and, unless it was a very poor carpet, it is doubtful that such a defect as the plaintiff describes would have been worn in the carpet; several witnesses, who must have known the truth about it, testified that there was no defect or worn place in the carpet.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Cochrane, P. J., Hinman, Davis and Whitmyer, JJ., concur.,
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.