Bader v. United Orthodox Synagogue

172 A.2d 192, 148 Conn. 449, 1961 Conn. LEXIS 200
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 13, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 172 A.2d 192 (Bader v. United Orthodox Synagogue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bader v. United Orthodox Synagogue, 172 A.2d 192, 148 Conn. 449, 1961 Conn. LEXIS 200 (Colo. 1961).

Opinion

Shea, J.

The plaintiff, who, by the pleadings, was admitted to have been an invitee, sustained injuries as the result of a fall from the back porch of a house on the defendant’s premises. These injuries were alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence. The court directed a verdict *451 for the defendant and thereafter denied the plaintiff’s motion to set it aside. The plaintiff has appealed.

Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the jury eonld have found the following facts: The defendant was a charitable corporation without capital stock, and its members derived no financial benefit from its operations. The plaintiff, a member of the defendant’s congregation, was also a member of the ladies’ auxiliary, which was organized to raise funds for the operation and benefit of the defendant. In June, 1955, the defendant became the owner of a one-family house Vhich was used as a meeting place for the members of the congregation and the organizations associated with it. A door opened from the kitchen onto a concrete porch which ran along the back of the house. Three concrete steps descended from the porch to the ground, which was about three feet below the level of the porch. These steps were not located directly in front of the kitchen door but were to the right of it as one left the house, thus making it necessary to walk two or three steps along the porch, parallel to the house, before attempting to descend the steps. Neither the porch nor the steps were equipped with any hand or side railings. The kitchen storm door opened outward to the right, so that a person leaving the premises would normally walk around the outside of the door in close proximity to the edge of the porch.

The plaintiff was fifty-five years of age. During the evening of December 12, 1955, she attended a meeting of the ladies’ auxiliary in the defendant’s house. Her husband drove her to the meeting and later returned to take her home. He entered the house through the kitchen door and beckoned to his *452 wife, and she went to the kitchen to meet him. They left the house by the kitchen door, the plaintiff holding her husband’s arm. The porch was unlighted at the time. After the door closed behind them, the plaintiff and her husband were in darkness, and the plaintiff was unable to see the steps leading down from the porch. They walked together across the porch, missed the steps and fell to the ground. The plaintiff was injured. Neither she nor her husband had been in the rear of the house before the night of the accident. While there was a light for the porch, controlled by a switch in the kitchen, neither of them knew of the light or of the location of the switch.

From the court’s memorandum of decision denying the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict, it appears that the court directed the verdict on the grounds that no expert testimony was presented to support the plaintiff’s contention that the lack of railings on the porch constituted a structural defect, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, that she was a beneficiary of the defendant’s services, and that she was not entitled to recover.

It has long been the established law of this state that a charitable corporation is not liable for injuries sustained by a beneficiary as a result of the negligent conduct of agents or servants of the corporation whom it has selected with due care. Hearns v. Waterbury Hospital, 66 Conn. 98, 126, 33 A. 595; Martino v. Grace-New Haven Hospital, 146 Conn. 735, 736, 148 A.2d 259. In such a situation, the servant alone is responsible for his wrong. Boardman v. Burlingame, 123 Conn. 646, 652, 197 A. 761. But the corporation may be liable for corporate negligence, which has been defined as the negligence of the offi *453 cers or managing directors who constitute the governing board, as distinguished from the negligence of the corporation’s ordinary employees. Edwards v. Grace Hospital Society, 130 Conn. 568, 571, 36 A.2d 273; Tocchetti v. Johnson Memorial Hospital, 130 Conn. 623, 627, 36 A.2d 381. Corporate negligence is the failure of those entrusted with the task of providing the accommodations and facilities necessary to carry out the charitable purposes of the corporation to follow, in a given situation, the established standard of conduct to which the corporation should conform. Coolbaugh v. St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church, 142 Conn. 536, 539, 115 A.2d 662; Evans v. Lawrence & Memorial Associated Hospitals, Inc., 133 Conn. 311, 316, 50 A.2d 443; Haliburton v. General Hospital Society, 133 Conn. 61, 64, 48 A.2d 261; Tocchetti v. Johnson Memorial Hospital, supra; Edwards v. Grace Hospital Society, supra; Boardman v. Burlingame, supra; Cashman v. Meriden Hospital, 117 Conn. 585, 587, 169 A. 915; Hearns v. Waterbury Hospital, supra, 122. The duty of following such a standard of conduct is nondelegable, and the corporation is chargeable with corporate negligence for failure to perform that duty. Tocchetti v. Johnson Memorial Hospital, supra, 628. In the case at bar, the plaintiff claims that the lack of a railing on the porch, which was elevated above the ground, constituted a dangerous structural condition; that the managing officers had either actual or constructive knowledge of the condition; and that the corporation itself was negligent in failing to provide proper safeguards for the premises. Evidence to support these claims was presented to the jury, and the question as to whether the neglect, if any, constituted corporate negligence should have been *454 left to the determination of the jury. The defendant was not relieved of liability for corporate neglect, established by the evidence, because the plaintiff was a beneficiary of its services. Hearns v. Waterbury Hospital, supra, 123; Tocchetti v. Johnson Memorial Hospital, supra; Edwards v. Grace Hospital Society, supra; Martino v. Grace-New Haven Hospital, supra.

Expert testimony was not required to support the claim of the plaintiff that the absence of a proper or suitable porch railing was a structural defect and therefore constituted corporate negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
172 A.2d 192, 148 Conn. 449, 1961 Conn. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bader-v-united-orthodox-synagogue-conn-1961.