203 Mich. 445 | Mich. | 1918
Lead Opinion
Testimony for plaintiff (none was offered by defendant except that of a medical man, called, for convenience, out of order) tended to prove that on January 4, 1915, while Leah Wine and her daughter were shopping in defendant’s store and
When plaintiff’s case was concluded, defendant moved for a directed ver,diet in its favor and, the motion being denied, rested. The case was submitted to a jury, and a verdict for defendant was returned. A motion for a new trial was refused.
Meyer Wine is husband of Leah Wine. He also began a suit against the defendant for damages for the injury resulting to him on account of the facts stated and the sums disbursed by him in curing his wife. The causes were heard together, submitted to the same jury, with the same result.
For Leah Wine it is assigned as error (1) that the court refused a new trial, (2) that the court submitted to the jury whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, (8) that certain of plaintiff’s requests to charge were refused, (4) that the court wrongly instructed the jury, (5) that counsel for de
In denying the motion for a new trial, after discussing and overruling the various grounds assigned therefor, the court said:
“I am constrained to say that in any event there is no necessity for reviewing these several assignments of error, because I am now convinced that under the evidence produced in this case the court at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case should have granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.”
The reasons for this conclusion are not stated beyond this, that in the same opinion it is recited that
“defendant moved for a directed verdict on the ground that under the evidence plaintiff had shown no act amounting to actionable negligence on the part of defendant.”
And it is further stated in the opinion:
“On the argument to the jury defendant’s counsel, contended that from the cross-examination of Mrs. Wine it developed that it was just as probable to conclude that she tripped by stepping on the skirt of her dress as upon the coil of cord or rope. Mrs. Wine admitted that she wore on the day of the accident a long dress skirt, and the jury could see the one she was then wearing; also that she was uncertain on her feet, very stout and heavy in physique.”
The appearance of Leah Wine and the length of the dress she wore may have impressed the jury favorably to the idea that it was at least uncertain whether the rope or twine was the cause of her fall. The testimony of her daughter, the only testimony pointing to defendant’s negligence, when read with that of the mother, whatever the appearance of the mother, raised a question of fact for the jury as to what brought about her fall. The daughter did not see her mother fall. The mother, as has been stated, does not account for the fall. The cord or rope is the only cause for
The assignments of error are in each case the same. Upon the subject of defendant’s alleged negligence the court advised the jury:
“The question is, Was this injury caused or produced, and does she suffer by reason of the negligence on the part of the defendant here, and should the defendant, by reason of such negligence, be required to respond in damages?
“In considering this question, gentlemen, as to negligence, a customer entering the store of a retail merchant by invitation has a right to believe that there are no concealed sources of danger and is not required to be on the look-out for the unusual thing. Is it a usual or unusual circumstance for a mercantile concern whose store is open for business, to have in its aisle a rope or cord? Was it in this instance so placed that a customer might reasonably be expected to stumble? Had Mrs. Wine no reason to suspect that such a condition ought to have existed, or is she chargeable with negligence in not anticipating such a circumstance?
“Where a mercantile establishment, by its advertising or otherwise, as I have stated, invites people to go upon its premises to inspect goods, does it assume to all who accept the invitation, the duty to warn them of any danger in coming, which is known to the employees of the mercantile establishment, or ought to be known of by them. Note the language of that, gentlemen, when you come to analyze the question of liability here; that is, was the danger known to the employees of the mercantile establishment, should they have known it, or was it by reason of the circumstances of the case unknown to him?
“Mrs. Wine was not charged with the duty of anticipating that there would be lying across the aisle of the defendant’s floor any such obstruction as the one over which she tripped, or claimed to have tripped. Now, gentlemen, in analyzing this proposition as to whether or not there was negligence on the part of*450 the defendant, you should inquire of the testimony and determine among other things, was this cord found wrapped about the leg or foot of- Mrs. Wine when she fell? Inquire from the testimony and determine whether, from the facts as they are adduced here, whether the fall was occasioned by the cord so wrapped about her foot. Inquire of the evidence and determine what, if anything, is shown as to whether one end of the cord was in the hands of the defendant’s employee at the time. If it was, whether anything at that time done by the employee of the defendant had a tendency to increase the danger or hazard. In fact, gentlemen, analyze all this testimony.
“It is the claim of the plaintiff in this case that this cord was of a material that permitted a loop as it lay on the floor, to stand up, and that by reason of that, in walking along she put her foot in that cord, and that there was quite a quantity of the rope or cord upon the floor, and that by reason of this entanglement it threw her down. Upon the other hand, gentlemen, the defendant contends that the dress of Leah Wine being rather long, that it is just as well to find that she was in the' act of leaning over in examining' the goods upon the table, that her dress being perhaps to some extent upon "the floor, she stepped upon it, tripped, and that occasioned the fall. In other words, gentlemen, analyze the evidence in the case and determine, if you can, whether or not this cord occasioned the fall. You will have to be satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that her fall was occasioned by this cord. You- cannot find the defendant in this case liable unless you determine the proximate cause of her falling was due to the fact of this entanglement of her foot in this rope or wire, cord.
“If you find the defendant was not negligent you need consider this case no further but return to this court with a verdict of no cause of action.
“If, upon the other hand, you find that the defendant was negligent, then you will pass to the next proposition : Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence?”
If any rule for determining defendant’s negligence was given, it .must be found in the foregoing. I feel
Upon the subject of the duty of the plaintiff the jury was told:
“One who enters a busy store must keep his wits about him and pay attention. He must pay attention to his surroundings, and' he cannot go hither and thither absent-minded and thinking of some particular subject, and, shutting his eyes to everything else. Such inattention is sometimes dangerous to the person himself, and quite as often to his neighbors. Such inattention is a want of that ordinary care which the safety of society requires of sane persons of mature age to exercise, and for which they are civilly responsible.”
This was, in any event, an erroneous statement of the law as applied to the facts of this case. It does not appear that plaintiff was acting differently from ordinary people who visit establishments like that of defendant to examine merchandise — to shop. As a general proposition, a customer in such a place has the right to rely upon the safety of passage along passageways used by customers. Brown v. Stevens, 136 Mich. 311; Bloomer v. Snellenburg, 221 Pa. 25 (21 L. R. A. [N. S.] 464, 69 Atl. 1124). The court was requested to so instruct the jury. But there was no evidence of any negligence of plaintiff contributing to her injury. She did not see the rope, or cord, on the floor, and, as the court said to the jury, she was not bound to anticipate that there would be any such obstruction.
There are other assignments of error, not consid
The appellee says that in any event the judgment was right and should not be reversed because (1) plaintiff did not introduce competent evidence that the store in which plaintiff was injured was owned and operated by defendant, (2) there was no proof that the young man who was taking down the decorations and had some of the cord in his.hand was an employee or in any way subject to the control or supervision of defendant, (3) there was no proof as to the person who put, or allowed to be put, the cord in the aisle, whether it was the young man referred to, some customer in the store, or any other person, (4) there was no evidence that the cord had been in the aisle at all before the moment the daughter of plaintiff saw it, which was almost the instant of the accident, and, therefore, there is no evidence of notice to the defendant, (5) there was no proof as to what caused the cord to fall, whether through negligence of any one or by accident, (6) there was no competent evidence that the cord was what caused the plaintiff to fall. Excepting, perhaps, the last point stated, it does not appear that any of these questions was presented to or considered by the trial court. And none of them can upon this record be resolved in favor of defendant as a matter of law.
The defendant is charged as a corporation, and the plea is the general issue. The testimony is to the effect that plaintiff was injured in the place of business of the defendant. It is said this is not enough in view of the well known custom of which the court will take judicial notice that many large stores apparently owned and operated by one company have departments operated and controlled by entirely separate corporations, and plaintiff is bound to prove that the particular department in which she was injured
Some inferences may be drawn from the fact that one is employed in a place of business, apparently doing the work of an employee. And the case differs from Toland v. Paine Furniture Co., 175 Mass. 476 (56 N. E. 608), where a customer fell over a mat on the floor, the mat being curled up, and from De Velin v. Swanson (R. I.), 72 Atl. 388, where a customer slipped on a banana peel on the floor. In the case at bar, there is evidence of the active agency of an apparent employee of defendant in making the passageway unsafe.
The other points are answered by what has already been said.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants as of a single appeal.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Accepting the proof offered in support of plaintiffs’ case in the light most favorable to their contention, I am convinced that there was no evidence of any negligence on the part of the defendant to warrant the submission of the case to the jury. The testimony discloses that the young man had a piece of cord in his hand and was apparently taking down some Christmas decorations, and that he inadvertently dropped it in the aisle. There is no proof that it was in the aisle before the moment that it was discovered by Mrs. Blaustein, the daughter of
The judgment should be affirmed.