25 A.2d 45 | Conn. | 1942
In this action for damages for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in falling down the cellar steps of the defendant's building by reason of its negligence, the court rendered judgment for the *680 plaintiff and the defendant has appealed. The following material facts found by the court are not subject to correction: At the time of the plaintiff's fall the defendant was the owner in possession of a building on Main Street in Hartford at the rear of which was a hatchway containing a stairway of eleven steps leading into the cellar. The first step from the top was made of concrete and its tread, which was nine inches in width, was sixteen and one-half inches below the ground level. On this tread was a loose plank ten inches wide and two inches thick, reducing this distance to fourteen and one-half inches. The edge of the plank extended one inch beyond the edge of the tread. The next ten steps were of wood with treads ten inches wide. From the top of the plank to the top of the tread of the first wooden step was ten inches. From the top of this tread to the top of the tread next below was also ten inches. The riser of each of the other steps was eight and one-quarter inches with the exception of the bottom one which was ten inches measured from the cellar floor. The standard height of risers in steps of this character is eight inches. While it is common practice to have a difference in the height of risers in such a stairway either at the top or at the bottom thereof, the conditions described rendered these steps not reasonably safe for use as hatchway steps. These conditions had existed for three or four years prior to the plaintiff's fall.
At about noon on May 18, 1939, in making a delivery for his employer to the defendant's building, it was necessary for the plaintiff to carry a one hundred pound bag of coal down these steps. Prior to this date the plaintiff had made one or more similar deliveries, carrying one hundred pound bags of coal down the steps without injury. On these occasions the construction of the steps was the same and a plank rested on *681 the concrete step. At the time in question the plaintiff opened wide the double hatchway doors, looked at the steps and the plank on the concrete step, and then with the one hundred pound bag on his right shoulder placed his right foot on the plank. As he did so the plank slipped to the next step below and caused him to fall upon his back, head and elbow and slide down the steps. Subsequently the plank was replaced and the plaintiff carried down nine similar bags. He sustained a lumbosacral strain, a cut on his right elbow and a brain concussion as a result of his fall, and remained in bed for the next three or four days. The average weekly earnings of the plaintiff before the accident had been twenty-two dollars and he was incapacitated for work for five weeks. He expended five dollars for medicines and seventy dollars for medical care, and suffered considerable pain and discomfort in his back and head. The court awarded him seven hundred dollars damages.
Aside from the defendant's attack upon the finding of subordinate facts, its brief limits the errors claimed to the court's conclusions that the stairway was not in a reasonably safe condition, that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, and that the plaintiff had not assumed the risk of any danger, and to its award of damages in an amount termed excessive. The court's finding that the stairway was not reasonably safe is amply supported not only by the subordinate facts already recited as to the loose plank and the heights of the risers of the two steps nearest the top, but also by the direct and undisputed testimony of the plaintiff's engineer. It was the duty of the defendant to use reasonable care to maintain these steps in a reasonably safe condition. Geoghegan v. G. Fox
Co., Inc.,
In view of the elements of damage sustained by the plaintiff which the court has found, we cannot say that the $700 awarded so exceeded fair and reasonable *683
compensation as to justify judicial interference. Squires v. Reynolds,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.