80 Cal. App. 2d 453 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1947
Plaintiff brought this action for the alleged wrongful death of his two-and-one-half-year-old daughter, who fell from the roof of defendant’s apartment house through a screened ventilating shaft. Defendant’s answer denied negligence and pleaded contributory negligence
The apartment building was owned by defendant, and a Mrs. Kostelnik was one of the tenants.' Mrs. Mann was employed in the check room, and Mrs. Kostelnik as cashier, at a night club, and they were friends of long standing. Mrs. Mann visited Mrs. Kostelnik at the apartment house about three times a week. Children were not allowed to live there, and Mrs. Kostelnik’s twelve-year-old son was only allowed to visit her after she obtained permission for him to do so. The written permission that was required stated that children allowed in the apartments were not permitted to loiter in the hallways or elsewhere about the premises, other than in the apartment where they were visiting. Mrs. Mann was familiar with this practice, having been so informed by Mrs. Kostelnik.
On the day of the accident, after the arrival of- Mrs. Mann and her daughter, Mrs. Kostelnik started up to the laundry room near the roof to do her laundry, and Mrs. Mann changed her clothing and removed most of the clothing of the child. She testified that Mrs. Kostelnik invited her to go to the roof to sun bathe and that she went there with her daughter; that the daughter stepped outside and her mother brought her back and put on her shoes; she had only looked out upon the roof through the doorway prior to the time the child fell into the air shaft; the child was playing up and down the steps leading to the roof and out on a boardwalk on top of the roof; Mrs. Kostelnik was washing clothes in the laundry room, which was close to the doorway leading to the roof; Mrs. Mann was standing in the doorway talking to Mrs. Kostelnik and watching her child; at the outer edges of the roof there was nothing other than a coping some 6 inches high; the air shaft was but a few feet away from the doorway, and the boardwalk on which the child was playing was but a few inches from the air shaft; there was a coping around the shaft, some 3 inches high, and also a wooden railing with a single rail approximately 30 inches above the coping; the child reached for the railing, her mother saw her and reached for her too late to catch her as she fell through the shaft. Mrs. Mann testified that she had never
The issues in the case were whether defendant was guilty of a breach of duty which she owed guests of her tenants in the apartment house and whether Mrs. Mann was guilty of contributory negligence in allowing her child to go upon the roof.
That the poorly-guarded air shafts created a condition on the roof which was dangerous for small children cannot be questioned, but it does not necessarily follow that defendant was guilty of negligence in allowing that condition to exist. Mrs. Kostelnik knew of the condition. Children were not allowed in the apartments except by special permission, and then were required to be kept in the apartments where they were visiting. None but adults were allowed to use the roof and then only for necessary purposes. There was a warning sign to this effect upon the door opening onto the roof. Mrs. Mann and her daughter were not invitees of defendant. They had been invited to the stairway leading to the roof by Mrs. Kostelnik, but according to the latter, had not been invited to go onto the roof, but only onto the steps at the entrance to the roof, where they would be in the sun. An invitation for Mrs. Mann to go onto the roof, either with or without her daughter, would have been contrary to rules established by defendant and the warning which she had caused to be placed on the door. Mrs. Kostelnik had no implied authority to allow her guests to use the roof in violation of the rules established by defendant.
An independent ground for affirmance of the order is that a determination by the jury that Mrs. Mann was
It was the duty of the court to weigh the evidence and to determine whether in the light of the evidence the verdict was a just one. Having reached the conclusion that the verdict was unsupported, it was equally the duty of the court to grant defendant’s motion. It is no more within the power of this court to interfere with a decision of a trial judge as to the weight of the evidence as determined by him on a motion for a new trial, than it is to review the determinations of fact of a jury.
Since the order is sustainable for the reasons stated, it is unnecessary to consider other grounds urged by defendant in support of the order.
The order and’judgment are affirmed.
Wood, J., and Kincaid, J. pro tern., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 14, 1947. Carter, J., voted for a hearing.