421 Pa. 413 | Pa. | 1966
Opinion by
Eleanor M. .O’Neill, the wife plaintiff herein, fell and was seriously injured while leaving a public funeral home owned and operated by the defendant. This action for damages followed, and at trial the jury awarded the husband and wife plaintiffs a verdict for a substantial sum. Later, the court en banc, unanimously concluding, inter alia,
The injured plaintiff, accompanied, by her husband, arrived at the funeral home on the day of the accident during the daylight hours of the late afternoon to pay respect to a deceased friend. ■ Two hours later, after
On the outside of the funeral home, there was a cluster of three spotlights illuminating the side of the building where the entrance was located. Also, around the perimeter of this part of the building, there was a series of lamps equipped with 100 watt bulbs. Directly over the doorway entrance, there were three light fixtures with aluminum reflectors equipped with 75 watt bulbs.
The wife plaintiff testified that as she walked through the dimly lit lobby and approached the entrance, she noticed a glare coming through the glass doors from the outside. She pushed open one of the doors and “there was this glare, this brightness from these lights; then I looked down; it still gave me the impression of a straight walk-way; so then I stepped out, and I stumbled and fell down .... They were bright lights, probably the spotlights, what lighting it was that was putting this glare there; it was a shining brightness.”
The burden was upon the plaintiffs to prove facts legally sufficient to support a cause of action. This required proof of: (1) breach of duty owed to them; (2) legal injury; and, (3) legal causation between the breach of duty, that is, negligence and the injury. See, Repyneck v. Tarantino, 415 Pa. 92, 202 A. 2d 105 (1964), and Adams v. J. C. Penney Co., 411 Pa. 653, 192 A. 2d 218 (1963). We agree with the court below that the evidence in this case is legally insufficient to establish a breach of duty.
In the complaint, the negligence upon which the cause of action was based was described as “deceptive lighting.” During the trial, statements of counsel indicated that the asserted negligence was “inadequate lighting.” An examination of the record manifests that the plaintiffs’ evidence itself established the existence of more than ample artificial illumination. As to the charge that “deceptive lighting” caused the wife plaintiff not to see the step involved, the record is devoid of evidence to show that the lights outside of the home were installed or placed in such a manner as to cause a deceptive or dangerous condition, which resulted in the injured plaintiff incorrectly assessing the pathway before her. Absent such proof, no breach of duty was established.
Judgment affirmed.
The court also concluded that the wife plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We find it unnecessary to reach this question.