Alsup v. Saratoga Hotel, Inc.

229 P.2d 985, 71 Idaho 229, 1951 Ida. LEXIS 269
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1951
Docket7640
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 229 P.2d 985 (Alsup v. Saratoga Hotel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alsup v. Saratoga Hotel, Inc., 229 P.2d 985, 71 Idaho 229, 1951 Ida. LEXIS 269 (Idaho 1951).

Opinion

KEETON, Justice.

Appellant (plaintiff) on November 5, 1948, was on premises of respondent (defendant) as an invitee, and while there received injuries for which he seeks to recover damages.

On issues joined the case was tried in the district court of Ada County, and at the conclusion of the appellant’s evidence, the trial judge granted a nonsuit and dismissed the action. The appellant appealed.

Appellant is a resident of Boise, and while in Caldwell on the day in question, was a patron of the Circus Room maintained in respondent’s hotel. He arrived there about five p. m., sat .at the bar and drank two jiggers of whiskey and about six o’clock inquired the way to the lavatory, and was advised 'by another patron of the place that the same was located in the basement and could be reached by a stairway which led from a vestibule near the end of the bar.

This stairway leading to the basement was approximately 30 inches wide and enclosed between walls. The steps were 9% inches wide. Along the right hand side of the stairway was a handrail. Appellant entered the vestibule leading to the stairway and dining room, started to descend, missed the first step and fell. He describes why and how he fell as follows:

“Q. And what occurred to you. Locke, as you attempted to go down the stairway to the lavatory? A. I just turned around to the left, — no handrail on the left — and stepped down to go down naturally, and in the stairway being out of proportion more than what I am used to, I am used to a regular stairway, where I work, I use often, it was farther down four inches I believe to be exact than what I am used to, *233 and in stepping down naturally my foot which I stepped down with, which was my right foot, I went to about half-way over the end of the step, and just threw my overbalance, and down the — down the stairway, all the way down.
“Q. And what was the condition of the step there, Mr. Alsup, with respect to height and with respect to its being level? A. Well, it’s unlevel; there is two inches difference in about a thirty-inch step; I think they are about thirty inches wide, and there’s about two inches difference in the rise between one end of the stairs and the other.
“Q. And how did that affect your bal-anee that night, when you started down the stairs? A. That caused me to over-step . — farther down, you know, than you think, and caused my right foot to go too far, and when I put my weight on it it naturally over-balanced me, and threw me down.
“Q. And how high is the first step, at the left side ? A. Eleven inches.
“Q. And how high is- it at the right side? A. Nine inches.
“Q. Then what happened to you when you lost your balance there on that step? A. I fell all the way down stairs.”

On cross-examination the appellant testified:

“Q. Did you look down the steps to see what they were like? A. Naturally.
“A. I saw the hand rail. Whether I looked especially to see it or not I wouldn’t know.”
“Q. You looked at the steps and saw their condition, and you saw a hand rail, but you did not take ahold of the hand rail, is that correct? * * * A. That’s correct.”

In a former accident which happened in 1943, appellant fractured the femur of the right leg and had suffered partial permanent disability. The right leg was about an inch shorter that the left, and he wore a built-up shoe and limped on the right foot, and there is a limitation in the side motion of that limb. This physical handicap may, but is not shown to, have contributed to the fall.

Appellant tripped over nothing; there was no obstruction in the passageway; the vestibule was lighted; the opening to the stairs and the enclosure were visible and seen; he made no attempt to use the handrail or steady himself by placing his hands on the walls which could have been reached. There was no door at the entrance to the steps. The 'Stairs were not 'hidden and the steps and stairway could be and were observed from top to bottom from the vestibule. Appellant saw the opening, the steps, stairway, handrail and the entrance to the dining room, but did not see signs shown in photographs admitted in evidence, reading “Watch Your Step” and denies the presence of such signs.

In the vestibule running from the bar to the dining room, there was an incline *234 in the floor forming the landing of two inches paralleling the top step of the stairs. Such descent or ascent of -two inches in the distance of thirty-one inches, is not shown to have created a dangerous or unusual condition, or to have caused the accident, and we cannot take judicial notice that such descent or ascent would, in itself, constitute a. hazard, which either contributed to or caused the damage complained of.

Appellant specifies error as follows: first, that the question of negligence and contributory negligence under the facts proved was one for the jury and not for the court; that the court committed reversible error in sustaining respondent’s objection to questions relative to the lighting of the vestibule of the stairway at the time of the accident as compared to the lighting shown in a photograph introduced in evidence.

The only evidence as to abnormality of height of the steps or riser was in appellant’s testimony as follows: “ * * *, and in the stairway being out of proportion more than what I am used to, I am used to a regular stairway, where I work, I use often, it was farther down four inches I believe to be exact than what I am used to, * * *

The stairway to which appellant states he was accustomed, could have been a riser anywhere from 5 to 7% inches.

From what source are we to assume as a matter of common knowledge, what the .ordinary, reasonable, safe standard of construction is, or should be, of the height of the riser, that is, from the landing to the first step? Appellant having pleaded abnormal height, it was incumbent upon appellant to present evidence showing that the abnormality, if any, was negligence, and further, that the abnormality in the height of the riser was the proximate cause of the damage complained of.

In Supreme Instruments Corporation v. Lehr, 190 Miss. 600, 199 So. 294, 1 So.2d 242, the plaintiff fell and was injured when attempting to step from the lavatory or rest room. The descent consisted of two steps, one 8% inches and the other step 9%6 inches. In that case, as in the case before us, the steps were of sound construction and free from latent or concealed defects. In holding that there was no liability, the Supreme Court of Mississippi said: “An employer was not negligent in maintaining a step to a rest room with a tread of lOVie inches and with a riser of 9%o inches, nor was the absence of a handrail negligence, much less a contributing ‘proximate cause’ of injury sustained by employee who tripped on step.”

Were we to assume here that the step in question deviated from what might be called standard construction, the question would arise whether or not such deviation was reasonable, or, unreasonable to a degree constituting negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P.2d 985, 71 Idaho 229, 1951 Ida. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alsup-v-saratoga-hotel-inc-idaho-1951.