323 Mass. 702 | Mass. | 1949
This is an action of tort for personal injuries received on June 4, 1946, on premises owned and maintained by the defendant on Broad Street, Lynn. After a verdict for the plaintiff the case comes here on the parties’ bills of exceptions wherein the defendant’s exceptions are to the denial of its motion for a directed verdict and to a portion of the judge’s charge. The plaintiff’s exceptions have been waived.
On the morning of the accident the plaintiff, who was employed as a carpenter by one John Crooker, went with his employer and the latter’s brother Joseph Crooker to the defendant’s lumber yard to obtain shingles. Without speaking to any employee of the defendant, the three drove into the yard in an automobile and parked opposite and about twenty feet away from one of the entrances to a shed in which bundles of shingles were stored. They entered the shed, selected some shingles and brought them out to the automobile. While returning from a second trip into the shed, the plaintiff fell and was injured.
There was evidence that ordinarily business visitors were expected to stop at the office at .the entrance to the yard and arrange for the purchase of required material with the defendant’s salesmen, but that John Crooker, being an old customer, had frequently and with the knowledge of the defendant’s employees entered the yard without stopping at the office, selected the lumber himself, and then had accounted for it as he left the yard. This prior conduct had met with the defendant’s acquiescence. The jury could have found that John Crooker was in the yard as an invited person and at the time and place of the accident was not acting outside the scope of the defendant’s implied invitation. Grogan v. O’Keeffe’s Inc. 267 Mass. 189. Silva v. Henry & Close Co. 279 Mass. 334, 336. O’Brien v. Harvard Restaurant & Liquor Co. Inc. 310 Mass. 491. As
When the automobile stopped, the . plaintiff saw a piece of canvas in the driveway between the automobile and the doorway of the shed five or six feet out from the building. The canvas was about four feet wide and five or six feet long and was wrinkled up. The doorway or platform in front of the doorway was raised one and a half feet from the ground. The men entered the shed and brought out to the automobile three bundles of shingles, each bundle weighing seventy pounds. They returned for more shingles, John Crooker entering the shed first, then the plaintiff, and last Joseph Crooker. Both the plaintiff and Joseph Crooker testified that at that time they saw the canvas in the driveway. The shingles were piled in the rear of the shed some fifteen feet from the doorway. John Crooker lifted a bundle of shingles and went out. The plaintiff followed him arid Joseph Crooker followed the plaintiff. As the plaintiff came out behind John and stepped down from the platform, he fell over the piece of canvas. When the automobile drove up to the shed an employee of the defendant, one Segal, had been piling lumber ten to twenty feet away. His work for the defendant consisted in piling lumber, loading trucks and cleaning up the yard. At the time the plaintiff fell Segal was four or five feet away from him. John Crooker was then at the automobile depositing his shingles and Joseph Crooker was still in the shed. The plaintiff testified that “he stepped down, started to step down, and the end of his foot caught on that piece of canvas that was in the driveway, it looked like the same one; he tripped and went down; . . . when he got caught on it the canvas was right near the doorway, against the building.” As he stepped down “he did not look where he was stepping down to ... he was looking ahead.” He had the bundle of shingles “on his right shoulder with both hands holding it up.”
The principal question before us relates to the defendant’s negligence as it is clear that the evidence did not
It is a familiar rule that a landowner owes to business visitors a duty to use reasonable care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for such visitors’ use according to the invitation extended to them, or at least to warn them of dangers not obvious to the ordinary person but which are known or should be known to the landowner. Kelley v. Goldberg, 288 Mass. 79, 81. Sweeny v. Old Colony & Newport Railroad, 10 Allen, 368, 373. Parker v. Jordan Marsh Co. 310 Mass. 227, 229. This duty to warn does not extend to dangers, knowledge of which the landowner may reasonably assume the visitor has. O’Hanley v. Norwood, 315 Mass. 440, 442.
In the present case the premises consisted of a lumber yard presumably in active operation. The object over which the plaintiff tripped was a canvas used in the conduct of the defendant’s business but not then being in actual use. Its presence in the driveway was obvious. The plaintiff in fact saw it and any warning concerning it would have been an “empty form.” Campbell v. Dearborn, 175 Mass. 183, 185. Although it had remained there two or three days, it presented no greater hazard to visitors than scattered pieces of lumber which might be expected to be lying about. It cannot be said that the defendant through its agents or servants should reasonably have anticipated that it would be a source of danger to invited persons who would expect to find conditions that would naturally result from the manner in which the business was openly and visibly being carried on. See Crone v. Jordan Marsh Co. 269 Mass. 289 (rug in store); Mahoney v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. 269 Mass. 459 (sled in store); Adriance v. Henry Duncan Corp. 291 Mass. 202 (lawnmower in store); Brooks v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. 302 Mass. 184 (wooden curb in parking lot); Parker v. Jordan Marsh Co. 310 Mass. 227 (low platform in store); O’Hanley v. Norwood, 315 Mass. 440 (protruding handle of a jack in a filling station); Flanders v. Pailey, 320 Mass. 744 (electric cord in office).
The plaintiff, however, contends that his injuries were
Plaintiff’s exceptions dismissed.
Defendant’s exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.