256 N.W. 674 | Minn. | 1934
The motion for a new trial was based upon one adverse ruling excluding an item of evidence offered by plaintiff. The ruling is the only error assigned on this appeal. The action is to recover damages on account of personal injuries received by plaintiff on February 13, 1933, when she slipped on the sales floor of defendant's office building in the city of Mankato and broke her hip. The negligence alleged against defendant was that it permitted its waxed linoleum floor to become wet, sloppy, and dangerously slippery from melting snow and ice. That plaintiff fell and received the serious injury stated is not controverted; nor is the fact that the floor where she fell was waxed battleship linoleum. There is a sharp dispute in the evidence as to whether the place where she went down was wet or dry. It appears that the accident happened sometime about or after 11:30 a. m. on the day above mentioned. It was a cold day. There had been a slight snowfall earlier that day. A few minutes after plaintiff had been taken away to the Mankato Clinic and shortly before the noon hour, H.B. Troost, a young doctor, entered *417 the same room where plaintiff had met with her accident. Dr. Troost was called as a witness by plaintiff and, after preliminary questions stating time and place of entering, this occurred:
Q. "Tell us what, if anything, happened as you went in after leaving the door?
Mr. Weyl: "That is objected to as incompetent and immaterial, as to what happened when this doctor went in the front door; there is no showing yet [sic] it has any relation to the case."
The objection was sustained, and plaintiff took an exception and offered "to prove by this witness that about 15 minutes before 12 on February 13, 1933, and at the time when Mrs. Taylor was at the Mankato Clinic after she had been injured, he walked into the salesroom of defendant's place of business, and within four or five feet after leaving the door his feet slipped out from under him; he caught himself without falling, but that the floor was wet and he slipped and nearly fell." Defendant interposed the objection to the offer that it was incompetent and immaterial. The court in sustaining the objection said: "I think you can prove any condition of the floor, but not anything else." The witness was permitted to state that the linoleum near the door was wet.
Was the offered testimony competent and material? For more than 50 years this court, in cases where the issue is dangerous or defective condition of an instrumentality or of a place, has held that it is competent and material to prove that others than plaintiff, when making use thereof, experienced effects of a similar nature to the one which befell plaintiff. It is sufficient to refer to the following cases: Phelps v. Winona
St. P. R. Co.
"Upon an issue as to the utility, proper condition or safety of any work of human construction designed for practical use, evidence tending to show how the article has served when put to the use for which it was designed, would seem to bear directly upon the issue, and often may be of the most satisfactory and conclusive character. It is objected by the appellant's counsel that the testimony presented new issues, of which his client had no notice, and which it could not be prepared to meet. In one sense, every item of testimony material to the main issue introduces a new issue; that is to say, *419 it calls for a reply. In no other sense did the testimony in question make a new issue. Its only importance was that it bore upon the main issue, and all legitimate testimony bearing upon that issue the defendant was required to be prepared for."
Defendant contends that even though the testimony offered was competent its admission was within the discretion of the trial court. Cook v. New Durham,
It is true that the erroneous exclusion of competent and material testimony does not justify a new trial unless its admission might reasonably have resulted in a different verdict. Nelson v. Farrish,
Order reversed.