This appeal is from a judgment for damages resulting from injuries sustained when plaintiff fell on a stairway in defendant’s department store. 1 The stairway led downward in a westеrly direction from the mezzanine to the first floor, and all of the steps, except the two at the bottom, adjoined a wall on the north side. There was a drinking fountain a few inches north of the second step from the bottom. At the time of her fall, plaintiff, who was carrying nothing except a small purse under her left arm, wаs descending the stairs with her 3-year-old son. She was holding the boy’s left hand, while he held a handrail with his right hand. On the third or fourth step from the bottom, she slipped on a wet spot and fell. A later inspection of the premises disclosed that, when the valve of the drinking fountain was pressed, water splashed onto the floor.
It was also established that the stairway, which was about 96 inches wide, had no center handrail. This was in violation of a safety order issued by the Division of Industrial Safety which required thаt stairways 88 inches or more in width be equipped with a center railing. The order was received in evidence over defendant’s objection, and in instructing the jury the court read the pertinent portions of the order and stated, in part, “If a party to this action violated the rule just read to you, a presumption аrises that he was negligent. This presumption is not a conclusive one. It may be overcome by other evidence showing that under the circumstances surrounding the event the conduct in question was excusable, justifiable and such as might reasonably have been expected from a person of ordinary prudenсe.”
The principal contention of defendant is that the court erred in admitting the safety order in evidence and in giving *848 the quoted instruction because, it is asserted, plaintiff was not a member of the class for whose protection the order was designed. In this connection, it is argued that sections 6312 and 6500 of the Labor Code, which empower the Division of Industrial Safety to provide for safety in every place of employment and to issue the type of order involvеd here, were enacted pursuant to sections 17% and 21 of article XX of the Constitution, that those constitutional provisions only authorize legislation affecting the employer-employee relationship, and that, therefore, safety orders issued by the division may not be regarded as applying to members оf the general public, such as plaintiff.
The cases of
Pierson
v.
Holly Sugar Corp.,
Defendant attempts to distinguish the foregoing eases from the present one on the ground that the plaintiffs there, although not employed by the defendants, were employees of third parties and were acting in the course of such employment. However, the fact- that the persons injured were employed by someone is not made the basis of any of those decisions, and, to the contrary, the Pierson and Nungaray cases rest expressly on the conclusion that the plaintiffs were protected as members of the general publiс. Moreover, a distinction between a person who enters a department store at the direction of his employer and one who comes thеre for the same purpose on his own initiative would be unreasonable and productive of anomalous results. Such a distinction would mean, for examрle, that the stairway safety order would apply to a secretary entering defendant’s store on a shopping errand for her employer but that it would nоt protect her if she went there during her lunch hour to make a purchase for herself, even though the store’s relationship to her would be identical in both instаnces.
Some safety orders, such as those regulating machinery, might be regarded as peculiarly designed to protect employees when applied to places of employment which the public is prohibited from entering. An entirely different situation, however, is presented where, as here, a pеrson is a business invitee in a department store and is using a stairway which the store provides for persons in her position as well as for employees. Plaintiff wаs entitled to the benefits of the safety order under the circumstances, and the court properly received it- in evidence and informed the jury that its violаtion by defendant gave rise to a presumption of negligence which could be rebutted by evidence of justification or excuse. (See
Gallup
v.
Sparks-Mundo Engineering Co.,
Pacific Gas & Elec. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
The evidence is clearly sufficient to support the verdict. The jury could have found that defendant was negligent not only in failing to equip the stairway with a center hаndrail but also in permitting water to be present on the steps and that defendant’s negligence in either or both of these respects proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Spence, J., and MeComb, J., concurred.
Sehauer, J., concurred in the judgment.
Notes
The plaintiffs are husband and wife, and the defendants are the owner and the manager of the store. For convenience, the designation plaintiff will be used to refer to the wife, and the owner of the store will be referred to as defendant.
