144 A. 355 | Md. | 1929
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Baltimore City Court on a directed verdict for the defendant in an action on the case for personal injuries brought by Harry Riganis, the appellant, against Theodore Mottu, trading as Theodore Mottu Company, the appellee.
There is in the record evidence tending to show facts which may be thus stated: Riganis needed some lumber for shelving at a laundry which he and a Mr. Allen, his partner, proposed to operate in Baltimore, and he, Allen, and a carpenter went to the appellee's lumber yard on Pennsylvania Avenue in that city to procure it. They went into appellee's office and told "the men in the office" what they wanted, and he asked them if they knew precisely what sizes they wanted. Riganis answered that they would "like to see" the lumber to be sure *342 they got the kind they needed. They were then told by the "man in the office" to go into the yard and ask "one of their men" to direct them to certain steps which led to the place where lumber such as they wanted was to be found, and then to come back to the office. They went into the yard and found there a colored man loading a truck. They asked him where they would find the particular kind of lumber which they needed, and he directed them to go up a flight of steps to a balcony or platform on which that sort of lumber was stored. That platform was from sixteen to twenty feet from the ground and the lumber was so placed as to leave a gallery or way about three feet wide between it and the edge of the platform, so that persons desiring to inspect it would be required to walk along that narrow gallery or way. And one so walking along it would have on one side the piled up lumber and on the other the outer edge of the platform from which there was a sheer drop to the ground below. Running along that edge was a railing about three feet high, consisting of 2 by 4 or 4 by 4 lumber, resting in slots cut in upright pieces which supported it.
Riganis and his companions went up the steps to the gallery and eventually found what they wanted. When they did, Allen took a piece of paper and a pencil and was jotting down memoranda, and as he was doing that, and while they were standing there in the gallery or way, Riganis leaned against the railing, which gave way, in consequence of which he fell to the ground and was injured.
As stated, the rail rested in a slot cut in the upright which supported it. The rail itself appeared from subsequent examination to be in sound condition, but the slot in the upright had become worn, and to quote one of the witnesses "It had been there for a long time and by people going up there, you know, this 2 x 4 or 4 x 4 in there, hitting against this side piece all the time, wore it out, and he put his weight against it and it went right over, one end of it did, and I said no wonder it is rotten." From that testimony, and from other testimony in the record, it may be inferred that such pressure as Riganis exerted against the rail forced it *343 against the outer edge of the slot, and that, because of the worn and defective condition of that slot, that end slipped out and the railing fell.
Upon these facts, the trial court ruled (1) that there was no legally sufficient evidence that appellee was guilty of primary negligence, and (2) that it sufficiently appeared that appellant was guilty of such contributory negligence as barred his right to recover; and by granting defendant's first and second prayers directed a verdict for defendant. We are unable to accept either of those conclusions, which we will consider in their order.
Appellant was on that part of appellee's premises where the accident occurred as an invitee (4 Words and Phrases, 3rd Ser., p. 526; 20 R.C.L., "Negligence," sec. 584; 5 C.J. 814), and appellee was bound either to exercise ordinary care to see that such premises were reasonably safe for him, or, if they were not, to warn the appellant of any latent or concealed danger. FultonBuilding Co. v. Stichel,
The distinction between such a state of fact and those involved in Kinney v. Onsted,
A case which seems closer to the question involved here, though not precisely in point, is Sefler v. Vanderbeck Sons,
There are cases in which there are dicta in apparent conflict with the conclusion which we have stated, but such of them as we have examined are distinguishable on the facts, and, in our opinion, the rule applicable to the particular facts of this case is as we have stated it.
What has been said in reference to primary negligence has some bearing also upon the question of contributory negligence, and it is unnecessary to discuss that question at any length. There is nothing in the record which indicates so clearly that the defect, which caused the railing to give way, was so apparent, or that the railing was so obviously unsuited for the use of which appellant put it, that it can be assumed, as a matter of law, that he was guilty of contributory negligence in leaning against it, but upon all the facts and circumstances of the case that question was clearly one for the jury. To justify the court in characterizing an act as negligent in law, it should be "distinct, prominent, and decisive, and one about which ordinary minds would not differ in declaring it to be negligent." TaxicabCo. v. Emanuel,
The judgment appealed from will therefore be reversed and a new trial awarded.
Judgment reversed and case remanded for a new trial, withcosts to the appellant.