Aita v. John Beno Co.

222 N.W. 886, 206 Iowa 1361
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 886 (Aita v. John Beno Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aita v. John Beno Co., 222 N.W. 886, 206 Iowa 1361 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Morling, J.

I. Plaintiff- testified that, on February 9th:

“I was injured in front of Beno’s. I was just walking east on the street. I was in the middle of the big window to the east of the door; that is where I was injured, or the accident happened. * * They were washing windows,—just came down with that brush, and hit me down so fast,—he got the stick between my legs, and I just dropped down. The stick was about 10 or I don’t know what happened to me; I just fell down on the.walk, and I didn’t know myself for a little while. * * * I don’t know myself how I was hurt, but I felt when I dropped, and the people saw when I didn’t get up, and they ran and picked—and I looked at this hand * * * I did not know the man who was washing the windows, personally. He was washing those windows. * * * I was half way between the building and the curb; was alone. There were quite a few people on the street right in front of Beno’s; they were on both sides, going in both directions. * * * There was no warning given of any kind about this man, doing that work.” 12 feet long.

She also testified:

“As I was passing there, I noticed this man washing the windows. I saw his pail and his pole. Q. You saw all that be *1363 fore yóu were hurt? A. No, I didn’t see it before; I just raised up my head, and then I saw the stick between my legs, and of course it tripped me over. Q. So you didn’t see anything-until it was all over? A. Well, I saw the pole. Q. Was that all? A. And I seen him, too. I didn’t see him before I fell; I saw him after I fell, and when I turned my head, I saw him. He never even stopped; All the 'people' were waiting there to see me get up.”

Another witness testified:

“I saw the accident. I .saw Mrs. Aita come, walking .up the street. I was standing in front of the dime store, rather to the west side of Beno’s store, and Mrs. Aita came up the street; and when she got to the east window of Beno’s, somebody was washing a window there, and just as she got there, run down the stick like, and caught her behind this leg, and in front of this leg, and threw her on her left side, this way [indicating], with her face on the pavement;”

The pole must havé been at least 10. or 12 feet long. This witness says the accident happened between 3 and 4 o’clock. Plaintiff’s son testified that, in conversation with the vice president of the defendant- company:

“I [witness] said, ‘It seems very careless to allow a man to use a long-handled pole out on a busy thoroughfare like this, in front of this place,.on this kind of a.day, especially,’ and he said: ‘We have stopped him from using that long handle. I regret this affair very much, and I don’t think it will happen again,—at' least we will try not to let it happen again.’ ”

This comprises all of the evidence of the cause and circumstances of plaintiff’s fall. Plaintiff’s age is not shown, further than that she is the mother of two adult children. The state of the weather, how she was wrapped, how fast she was traveling, are not shown. The record is silent as to her condition of physical or mental alertness, or her power of observation -through her senses, of sight and hearing, further than as may be inferred from the testimony above set out. No attempt was made to show further what, if any, care she took to observe or avoid.collision with Baron or the pole he was using. How many people were, on the walk at the time; whether they were jostling each other or *1364 plaintiff or Baron; what observation the window washer was taking of the passers-by; what effort he was making, if any, to avoid contact with passers-by; what difficulty there was, or absence thereof, in avoiding contact or jostling; what precautions, if any, were necessary or adopted, either on his part or on plaintiff’s part; in short, what the plaintiff was doing, and what Baron was doing; what the dangers were, and to whom; and what was required, both on the part of plaintiff in avoiding injury and upon the part of Baron, and not only upon plaintiff, but other pedestrians; the facts from which the deduction of exercise of or failure to exercise reasonable care by plaintiff and defendant might be made,—are not in evidence.

Plaintiff, to recover, was under the necessity of proving: (1) That Baron was not in the exercise of reasonable care in the úse of the pole; (2) that the plaintiff was free from negligence on her part, proximately contributing to her fall; (3) that her •fall was the proximate result of Baron’s negligence; and (4) that she sustained injuries therefrom.

Her statement “he got the stick between my legs” means :nothing on the question of negligence, when considered in con.nection with her other statements:

“I don’t know what happened to me. I just fell on the walk * * * I don’t know myself how I. was hurt, but I felt when J dropped. * I didn’t see it before I just raised up my head, :and then I saw the stick between my legs, and. of course it tripped'me over. * * * I didn’t see him before I fell. I saw him after I fell, and when I turned my head, I saw him. He never stopped.”

For all that appears, she blindly ran into Baron, or into his implement. Other pedestrians might have jostled her or him. Baron might have had sufficient space in which to freely operate his cleaner. His bucket and pole were in plain sight, and it might have been apparent to him that the approaching pedestrians, including plaintiff,' were observing and avoiding him. In short, how the interposition of the pole between plaintiff’s legs came about, whether from plaintiff’s' negligence, whether from the act of other persons on the walk, or whether from the negligence of the defendant, or from a combination of two or 'more of these caúses, is a matter of the merest guess and conjecture.

*1365 The witness’s statement that .(Baron) the window washer, just as plaintiff “got there, run down the stick like, and caught henbehind this leg and in front of this leg, and threw her on her left side,” is, for the same reasons, insufficient to show fault on the part of Baron, proximately causing the injury, or absence of fault on the part of plaintiff, contributing to it. So the statement of the vice president, as testified to by the son, does not purport to be a relation of any facts or an admission of liability, even though such admission, if made, could be accepted as proof of negligence of the corporation and absence of negligence in plaintiff.

Plaintiff invokes the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, “the thing speaks for itself.” But this thing in question' here does not speak for itself. The control of the pole is not shown to have been exclusively in Baron, as against the- motions of the plaintiff and others. The instrumentality was not peculiarly, in that respect, within Baron’s control. It is manifest that no presumption of want of ordinary care on thé part of Baron is raised by the facts shown in evidence. That the accident was the proximate result- of such negligence, rather than" of numerous other possible causes, including the negligence of the plaintiff herself, is wholly conjecture.

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Bluebook (online)
222 N.W. 886, 206 Iowa 1361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aita-v-john-beno-co-iowa-1928.