56 P.2d 1344 | Mont. | 1936
This case was brought and tried on the theory that plaintiff was and acted as an invitee of defendant. Defendant opposed that theory and contended plaintiff at most was a mere licensee and defendant owed him no greater duty than to refrain from inflicting on him wilful or wanton injury. We contend the undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff was on the premises of defendant and at the garage thereon as an invitee of defendant and that he did as an invitee all he did, and that his presence and acts could be nothing but those of an invitee.
Manifestly, an invitee is one who is invited, expressly or impliedly; one who receives an invitation, express or implied. (Howe v. Ohmart,
What duty does an inviter owe to his invitee? It is "to use reasonable care for his safety." (Liston v. Reynolds,
Was defendant negligent? "Negligence is the want of ordinary care; that is such care as an ordinarily prudent man would exercise in the place of, and under the same circumstances as, the party charged with negligence." (St. Louis S.F. Ry. Co.
v. Dodd,
The definition last above has been repeatedly reaffirmed by this court. (Flaherty v. Butte Electric Ry. Co.,
Defendant was supposed and required by law to know there was danger of the wings on his truck falling, when upright and unfastened, by any jar. It was incumbent on him to know *139
it. (Hollingsworth v. Davis-Daly Estates Copper Co.,
The case should have gone to the jury. (Cameron v. KenyonConnell Com. Co.,
The plaintiff was a bare licensee. His sole purpose in going to the defendant's garage was to accept a benefit or favor to himself, and he was therefore a mere licensee. (Aguilar v.Riverdale Cooperative Creamery Assn.,
The duty of a licensor is to refrain from inflicting wilful or wanton injury on the licensee. Recent decisions are almost uniform in holding that "the only duty which the owner of property owes to a trespasser or a licensee is to refrain from wilful or wanton injury." (Jonosky v. Northern Pacific Ry.Co., supra; Hall v. Southern California Edison Co.,
Regardless of whether the plaintiff was an invitee, licensee, guest or trespasser, the defendant could not be liable unless he had knowledge of the alleged dangerous condition. (45 C.J. 651, sec. 25; p. 837, sec. 245; Doran v. United States Building Loan Assn.,
If under any theory of this case it could have been contended there was a duty on the part of the defendant to have warned the plaintiff of the alleged danger, that contention could not be urged, for the reason the complaint does not allege any such duty or breach thereof. (45 C.J. 1073; Locke v. Payne,
Counsel for plaintiff say in effect that the duty of defendant included adequate inspection of his truck. As pointed out inMarple v. Haddad,
Plaintiff, a man 53 years of age, was employed in the fall of 1933 as assistant tareman for the Great Western Sugar Company at Worden, Montana. He commenced work on the 2d of October of that year, and on the evening of the 14th went to the home of Charles Horton, who was his nephew and at whose home he had been taking a part of his meals while so employed, for which he paid agreed compensation. On the evening of this day his purpose in going there was to pay Mrs. Horton for his board for the week and to secure his laundry, which he had left there at noon. He remained there for the evening meal. After he had finished, he told the defendant, Horton, that he was going to his mother's to spend Saturday night and Sunday, who lived three and a half miles west and a little north of Worden. The defendant said, "Wait a minute and I will take you over." Plaintiff replied, "No, you don't need to take me over. For that matter, I could walk in a little while. There is plenty of people going over that way." Defendant said he had to go over anyway, that he had been hauling water from there, and he also had to take his brother, Paul Horton, home.
Thereupon plaintiff and defendant left the house and proceeded to the garage. The evening was dark and it was raining. *144 The wind was blowing "pretty hard" from the west. Defendant's garage stood north and south, with the doors in the south end. It was a small garage, and within it defendant had a truck with a body on it which was used for the hauling of beets. The clearance between the sides of the doorway and the body of the truck was a matter of approximately eight inches. On each side of the body of the truck were wings which were on hinges and capable of falling outward. When the truck was loaded with beets, these wings were held upright by means of chains. During the day Paul Horton, the brother of defendant, had been engaged in hauling beets; and, while the plaintiff was in the house listening to the radio, he saw Paul Horton shovel the dirt out of the truck and drive it into the garage. The wings mentioned were 23 or 24 inches wide; they had been placed in an upright position but not chained. The truck was comparatively new and the hinges were stiff, so that when the wings were placed in an upright position they would remain in that position without fastening the chains, unless the truck was jarred. There was no method for fastening the garage doors back, and the defendant requested the plaintiff to take hold of the west door and hold it open. The plaintiff testified: "I took hold of the door and pulled it open and held it. I stood back as far as I could back up against the brace from the post at the corner of the garage. In the position I was standing, the car could not strike me if it backed out straight." Defendant went into the garage, started the car, turned on the lights, and proceeded to back out of the garage. One witness testified as to the backing of this car. "He backed out real fast." Another testified: "The truck came out unusually fast. Defendant did not back the car out straight." Plaintiff described the movement of the truck as follows: "It seemed like he cut the truck so that the back end of it swung to the southeast throwing the front part over. In backing out, the truck caught on the side of the door frame on the southwest — on the west side of the door — the door was hung on, and split the studding. The front corner of the truck hit the door frame." The wing of the truck came down, struck the plaintiff, *145 and inflicted personal injuries. The force of the blow threw the plaintiff some fifteen feet. Plaintiff's position, as testified by him, in holding the door was against a brace between two posts.
In Mellon v. Kelly,
Plaintiff contends that the relation between the parties to[2] the action at the time he sustained the injury was that of invitor and invitee; whereas the defendant contends that the relation at the time was that of licensor and licensee. If the contention of plaintiff is correct, then defendant owed the plaintiff the positive duty to exercise reasonable care for his safety. If, however, the contention of defendant is sustained, then his only duty owing to plaintiff was to refrain from wanton or wilful acts which might occasion injury. (Fusselman v.Yellowstone Valley L. I. Co.,
As a general rule, the few decisions on the question hold that[3] the relation between a host and a guest on private premises is not that of invitor and invitee, but is that of licensor and licensee. (Greenfield v. Miller,
Counsel for the defendant has cited a host of authorities which correctly announce the rule as to the duty of a licensor owing to a licensee. Without pausing to review these decisions, we may say of them, generally, that they do not relate to a state of facts where the person held to be a mere licensee was performing a service for the licensor, as in this case, and we therefore think they are of no persuasive value here.
Defendant contends that plaintiff was guilty of contributory[4] negligence as a matter of law. It appears that plaintiff was familiar with the premises, with the particular truck, the use and operation of beet trucks, and the fact that the wings could be, and frequently were, closed without hooking the chains. It is further argued that plaintiff could have occupied a position of greater safety, although the evidence is to the effect that, if the truck had been backed out so that it did not strike the side of the garage doorway, the wing would not have fallen and plaintiff would not have been injured.
Mere knowledge of the existence of an offending instrumentality at the place where an injury is suffered does not raise a legal presumption of contributory negligence, unless it further appears that the plaintiff had reason to apprehend danger. (Hughey v. Fergus County,
Defendant contends that the complaint was insufficient, in[6, 7] that it was not alleged that he had any knowledge of the alleged danger to which plaintiff claimed he was subjected. The allegation to which this contention is directed *147
was that the defendant was in a position to know, and knew, or could and should have known, that the chains holding the wings were not fastened. Such an allegation is no stronger than the weakest alternative (Pollard v. Oregon Short Line R. Co.,
It appears from the record that this cause had theretofore[8] been tried upon a similar complaint and resulted in a judgment of nonsuit. Defendant has made a cross-assignment of error seeking a review of the ruling of the court in refusing to admit the judgment-roll in the previous action. Defendant contends that this judgment-roll, if admitted, would have sustained the affirmative plea in his answer of res judicata.
Section 9320, Revised Codes 1921, provides: "A final judgment dismissing the complaint, either before or after a trial, does not prevent a new action for the same cause of action, unless it expressly declares, or it appears by the judgment-roll, that it is rendered upon its merits." The judgment-roll which was offered does not expressly declare that it was upon the merits, nor does it so appear therefrom. We have said a judgment of nonsuit is not a judgment on the merits, and nothing short of a judgment on the[9] merits can prevent a new action. (Arnold v.Genzberger,
Counsel for the defendant relies upon the case of Dunseth v.[10] Butte Electric R. Co.,
The trial court was not in error in excluding the judgment-roll; it was, however, in error in sustaining defendant's motion for nonsuit. Accordingly, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court of Yellowstone county, with direction to grant the plaintiff a new trial.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE SANDS and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MATTHEWS, STEWART and MORRIS concur. *149