Lead Opinion
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Plaintiff, Virginia Chance, was awarded a unanimous verdict of $15,000 against defendants Lawry's, Inc., a restaurant, John Krenz, its manager, and Donald F. Shaw, the general contractor who was engaged in remodeling the premises. Defendants appeal from the judgment entered on this verdict, and from the order denying their motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The same jury also returned a verdict against Alfred Chance, husband of Virginia, on his cause of action seeking to recover "damages for loss of consortium and services." He has not appealed from this adverse judgment.
On September 29, 1958, Virginia Chance was injured when she fell in the foyer of Lawry's restaurant. Earlier in that year Lawry's had started to remodel the restaurant, including the foyer, under the supervision of defendant Shaw, a general contractor. One feature of the remodeling was the installation of a planter box in the foyer of the restaurant. The foyer was approximately 6 feet wide and 10 feet long, and was enclosed by glass double swinging doors at each end. The planter box, recessed into the west wall of the foyer (to the right-hand side of one leaving the restaurant), was about 30 inches in width, 6 feet in length and 18 inches in depth. It was joined to the floor by a coved base of smooth terrazzo. On September 29th Shaw was still doing some construction work in the foyer, although the carpenter work on the planter box had been completed. At the time of the injury the workday was over *373 and Shaw's workmen and subcontractors had left the premises.
Mrs. Chance was one of a party of eight who had dined at Lawry's on the night of the accident. After they had finished dining and were about to depart, Mr. Martini, one of the party, opened the right-hand glass door into the foyer and then stepped partly in front of it holding the door open to permit the others to pass through. Mrs. Chance followed and stood next to Mr. Martini, at his right. Mr. Humphrey, also in this party, was standing on Mrs. Chance's right. Thus the three stood with their backs to the planter box and to the west wall of the foyer waiting for the rest of the group. As Mrs. Chance entered the foyer another party was either going out of or coming into Lawry's. This resulted in considerable crowding. To relieve the congestion and to permit someone to pass, both Humphrey and Mrs. Chance stepped backward. Humphrey bumped against the planter box and momentarily lost his balance. When he recovered his balance he saw that Mrs. Chance had not been so fortunate. As she stepped backward she struck the back of her knee on the wall of the planter box, lost her balance and fell into the open box. There is no dispute but that the foyer was then well lighted. Mrs. Chance, Martini and Humphrey testified that they had not observed the planter box either when they entered Lawry's before dinner or when they reentered the foyer after dining. They admitted, however, that they could have seen it had they looked.
Admittedly Mrs. Chance was an invitee of Lawry's. The duty imposed on the invitor is clear. [1] "It is the general rule that the proprietor of a store who knows of, or by the exercise of reasonable care could discover, an artificial condition upon his premises which he should foresee exposes his business visitors to an unreasonable risk, and who has no basis for believing that they will discover the condition or realize the risk involved, is under a duty to exercise ordinary care either to make the condition reasonably safe for their use or to give a warning adequate to enable them to avoid the harm." (Bridgman
v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
[3] Under the facts, the jury could have concluded that the open planter box, situated as it was in a narrow foyer of a busy restaurant, and which constituted a hazard when a patron merely stepped aside, as a matter of courtesy, to let another person pass, was a dangerous condition. There were no signs, barricades or warnings in front of the trench. There is substantial evidence to support the jury's conclusion that in the exercise of ordinary care in these circumstances Lawry's should have either obviated the danger or warned Mrs. Chance of its existence.
[4] It is Lawry's main contention that, under the facts, it was under no duty to warn its patrons because the danger of the open planter box was so obvious that it could reasonably anticipate that patrons would see and apprehend the danger. Therefore, so it is argued, Lawry's owed no duty to warn Mrs. Chance of such a danger. (2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (7th ed. 1960) p. 1457; Seavey, Swift Co. v. Schuster — Liability toOne Aware of Danger (1952) 65 Harv. L. Rev. 623, 625; Keeton,Personal Injuries Resulting From Open And Obvious Conditions (1952) 100 U. Pa. L. Rev. 629, 634.)
In our opinion this was a fact question for the jury. Under the evidence the jury could reasonably conclude that Lawry's could not have reasonably expected that its patrons would necessarily see the planter box and apprehend the danger. Lawry's knew that its restaurant and bar could accommodate as many as 300 persons at any one time, and that the small and narrow foyer, measuring only 6 by 10 feet, would be crowded during the dinner hours. Moreover, Lawry's must be held to know that the members of a dinner party working their way through a crowded restaurant foyer cannot be expected to be as observant as a pedestrian in the open street (see Blodgett v. B.H. Dyas Co.,
[6a] Defendants also urge that even if Lawry's was under a duty to warn its patrons of the danger, the danger was so obvious that Mrs. Chance must be held guilty of contributory *375
negligence as a matter of law in not seeing it. [7] "To establish the defense of contributory negligence as against the verdict of a jury, the evidence must be such that the appellate court can say that there is no substantial conflict on the facts, and that from the facts reasonable men can draw but one inference, which inference points unerringly to the negligence of the plaintiff proximately contributing to his own injury." (Crawford v. Southern Pac. Co.,
It must be held, therefore, that there was substantial evidence to support the implied findings of negligence on the part of Lawry's and its general manager Krenz, and that Mrs. Chance was not guilty of contributory negligence. This being so, it ends the inquiry of this court as to these issues (Crawford v. SouthernPac. Co., supra,
[8a] Defendant Shaw, the contractor, contends that he breached no duty of care he owed to Mrs. Chance. It is his contention that although Mrs. Chance was an invitee of Lawry's she was but a licensee as to the contractor. As licensor, Shaw maintains that his duty was simply to refrain from injuring Mrs. Chance willfully or through active negligence. Mrs. Chance, on the other hand, claims that Shaw should be held to the same duty of care as that imposed upon the invitor, Lawry's.
[9] It is clear that, where an independent contractor exercises control over the owner's premises, his duty of care toward third persons is commensurate with that of the owner (seeCoggins v. Hanchette,
[11] The imposition of a legal duty by precisely defining the status of the injured person vis-a-vis the tortfeasor is hard enough and often arbitrary where the defendant is an owner or occupier of real property (Fernandez v. ConsolidatedFisheries, *377 Inc.,
[12] The liability of an independent contractor to one not a party to his contract "is a matter of policy and involves the balancing of various factors, among which are the extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff, the forseeability of harm to him, the degree of certainty that he suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the defendant's conduct and the injury suffered, and the policy of preventing future harm." (Stewart v. Cox,
On several occasions the courts of this and other states have defined the independent contractor's duty to third persons without regard to the legal classifications of "invitee," "licensee" and "trespasser." In Donnelly v. Hufschmidt,
In Hall v. Barber Door Co.,
[13] The independent contractor's duty of care was succinctly stated by Denning, Lord Justice, as being "a general duty imposed by law to use reasonable care to prevent damage to persons whom he may reasonably expect to be affected by his work. . . . The cases show, moreover, that the duty of care is owed to all those whom the contractor may reasonably expect to be affected by his work, whatever the capacity in which they come, whether as invitees or licensees or as other contractors. . . ." (Riden v.A.C. Billings Sons, Ltd. [1956] 3 All E.R. 357, 361. See also Civ. Code, §
[8b] It is undisputed that Shaw knew the restaurant was open for business during the remodeling, and that the foyer was the only means of ingress and egress for patrons. Mrs. Chance was certainly a person that Shaw could "reasonably expect to be affected by his work." That Shaw left the premises by 4:30 every afternoon and had no actual control at the time of Mrs. Chance's accident was a factor to be considered by the jury in determining whether Shaw's conduct was reasonable, but the "responsibility of contractors for defective work does not cease as soon as they leave the premises. . . ." (Fleming, Torts (1957) p. 431; Dow
v. Holly Manufacturing Co.,
The defendants next complain of several of the instructions.[14] Defendant Shaw complains of the court's refusal to give an instruction that consisted of two parts: (1) a person entering a building under construction or reconstruction assumes the risk and (2) a contractor has no duty toward invitees of the owner of the premises to change his method of operations "which are carried on so openly as to be obvious to all observers." The evidence would not support such an *380 instruction. Shaw and his employees supposedly left the premises each afternoon in such condition that the restaurant could be safely used by the public that evening, and plaintiff wife was injured in a place where she was expected to go, the foyer, as the result of an unsafe condition, the exposed planter box. And, as shown above, the danger was not "obvious to all observers."
[15] Defendant Lawry's complains of an instruction given to the effect that said defendant owed Mrs. Chance and her husband as customers "a duty to exercise ordinary care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition or to warn them of anydanger so as not to unnecessarily expose them to danger or accident. (Emphasis added.). . . ." Since an invitor is not required to give an invitee warning or notice of an obvious danger, Lawry's contends that the above-underscored language put an undue burden on it. However, following the above-challenged instruction the court instructed: "But the responsibility of one having control of the premises is not absolute; it is limited to the performance of certain duties defined in my instructions . . . [the owner] is not bound to discover defects which reasonable inspection would not disclose, and he is entitled to assume that the invitee will perceive that which would be obvious to her upon ordinary use of her own senses. In brief, no duty exists to give the invitee notice of an obvious danger. . . . Each the invitee and the invitor, so long as he is exercising ordinary care and no circumstance exists that either causes him or would cause a reasonably prudent person in his position to think differently, has a right to assume that the other will be possessed of normal faculties of sight and hearing and will exercise ordinary care, and he has the right to rely on that assumption." The instructions must be considered as a whole. (Martens v. Redi-Spuds, Inc.,
[16] Defendants next contend that the trial court committed prejudicial error in giving the following instruction (based onSummers v. Tice,
We do not agree. The jury was instructed (at the request of all parties) that all parties asserting "the affirmative of an issue must prove that issue by a preponderance of the evidence." The instruction (No. 21) explains what is meant by preponderance of the evidence and then states specifically that "plaintiff has the burden of proving the following issues: (1) that a defendant was negligent and (2) that such negligence, if any, was a proximate cause of the accident and the injuries, if any, suffered by plaintiff (3) the nature and extent of such injuries and damages. Plaintiff has this burden as to each defendant." Instruction No. 132.1 (given at the request of defendants Lawry's and Krenz) stated: "The law does not permit you to guess or speculate as to the cause of the accident in question. If the evidence is equally balanced on the issue of negligence, contributory negligence or proximate cause, then your findings must be against the party making the charge on that issue." Instruction No. 171-A (given at the request of defendants) stated: "The burden rests upon each plaintiff to prove by a preponderance of the evidence the elements of her damage, if any. The mere fact that an accident happened, considered alone, would not support a verdict for any particular sum."
The questioned instruction (No. 104-F) was given between
other instructions dealing with plaintiff's burden of proof. Furthermore, the questioned instruction itself began with the statement that to be applicable, the jury must have found *382 both defendants negligent and that the negligence proximatelycaused plaintiff's injuries. The jury must be presumed to have understood the instructions on burden of proof and negligence as given them (Poncino v. Sierra Nevada L. C. Co.,
[17] Moreover, even if the giving of instruction 104-F was error, such error was not prejudicial. The jury was properly instructed on the plaintiff's burden of proof and the issue of negligence applicable to the respective defendants. It does not appear that a "different result would have been probable had the questioned instructions not been given." (Taylor v. PacificContainer Co.,
[18] The defendants next maintain that the record shows that the medical expenses for injuries to Mrs. Chance were paid by her husband, and that the jury was instructed at plaintiff's request that any recovery therefor was to be by her husband.1 The jury returned a verdict of $15,000 in favor of plaintiff-wife and a verdict in favor of defendants against plaintiff-husband. This, defendants contend, is an inconsistency in the verdicts which requires a reversal, citing Lanning v. Trenton Mercer CountyTraction Corp.,
This is not a case, as defendants claim, analogous to an action against an employer based on respondeat superior, where liability of the employer is entirely dependent on that of the employee so that a judgment against the employer cannot stand where judgment is rendered in favor of the employee. (Bradley v. Rosenthal,
The evidence, viewed in the light favorable to the prevailing party (Crawford v. Southern Pac. Co., supra,
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Gibson, C.J., Traynor, J., White, J., and Tobriner, J., concurred.
Notes
Dissenting Opinion
I would affirm the judgment as to defendants Lawry's, Inc., and John Krenz, but I would reverse it as to defendant Donald F. Shaw, and direct the trial court to enter a judgment in his favor, for the reasons set forth by Mr. Justice Ashburn in the opinion prepared by him for the District Court of Appeal (Cal. App.)
Schauer, J., concurred. *385
