Bender v. White

92 P.2d 268, 199 Wash. 510
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1939
DocketNo. 27339. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 268 (Bender v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bender v. White, 92 P.2d 268, 199 Wash. 510 (Wash. 1939).

Opinions

Geraghty, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the superior court, entered upon the verdict of a jury, awarding damages to the respondent for injuries resulting from the alleged negligence of the appellant.

The principal contention urged by appellant for reversal of the judgment is that the respondent’s evidence established, as a matter of law, that she was guilty of contributory negligence. The material facts may be summarized as follows:

The respondent sustained the injuries for which she sues by a fall into the elevator shaft of the Norfolk building, in Spokane, owned by the appellant. The building, five stories high, fronts on the north side of Riverside avenue. The first floor is used for commercial purposes, and the four upper floors for offices and studios. The respondent, a music teacher, had a studio on the fifth floor, with her living apartment in connection. The entrance to the building was had from Riverside avenue by a hallway thirty-five feet deep and about eight feet wide; one-half of this was taken up by a stairway leading to the upper floors.

The upper floors were also served by an elevator, entered through a door at the rear of this hallway. Elevator service was ordinarily furnished to the tenants until nine o’clock at night. At that hour, service ceased and the lights in the entry hallway were turned off, and the hallway would be unlighted, except for such light as might come from the upper floors through the stairway opening. Occasionally, by special arrangement, when recitals or entertainments were given in some of the studios, the management of the build *512 ing would furnish special elevator service to a later hour.

Some of the tenants were supplied with keys to the elevator to enable them to use it after hours, if they ■so desired. The respondent was furnished a key when she became a tenant in the building, and was shown how to use it for opening the door to the elevator. She was familiar with the operation of elevators. In addition to the respondent, at least two other tenants had sleeping quarters in the building; and the building manager, with his wife, occupied a penthouse on the roof.

On the evening of her injury, July 30, 1936, the respondent left the building a few minutes before nine o’clock. She inquired of the elevator operator if he was going to leave the car at the first or the fifth floor. He told her he was going to leave it at the first floor. If the car was left at an upper floor, and she desired to use it, it would be necessary for her to go to the basement, where, by operating a switch, the car could be brought down to the basement floor. Sometimes there was a light in the basement and sometimes there was not, and it would be difficult for her to find her way about, so much so that latterly, if the elevator was not at the main floor, she did not attempt to use it.

On this evening, her purpose was to return to the building before ten o’clock. She had observed that it was the custom of the building manager to go out on Thursday nights, and he would not return ordinarily until about ten oclock. She thought that, if she hurried back before that hour, the car would be at the first floor, and she could take herself up to the fifth.

Respondent returned to the building shortly before ten. After stopping for a brief conversation with a woman who was leaving the building, she proceeded *513 to the elevator. The lights were out in the hallway, and it was dark. We quote her testimony from the abstract:

“I went to the elevator, I took out my little key that I had at that time, . . . and inserted it in this little hole in the door, and open the door part way, pulled it far enough so I could get my hand in and I pulled it open as far as it would slide easily. I had my right hand on the door because the door opens from the left to the right, I had my foot flush with the floor to feel for the floor of the car. I put my foot in feeling for it, and as I did, this door slid and I fell in fourteen feet.”

On cross-examination, she testified:

“Well, my habit was in opening that door to ascertain if the elevator was there, was just to open it enough to reach my hand inside and feel the lock of the cage when I wasn’t definitely positive that it was there. Q. You didn’t do that this time? A. No, because I was so sure it had been left there, and it was still there. Q. So you were sure of that, notwithstanding the fact that you told me a moment ago that you didn’t know whether it would be there or not? A. There was always a possibility. ... Q. In order to put your foot in there, you had to hold on to this door? A. I was steadying myself with that. Q. It would have been just as easy and far more practical, for you to have opened the door as far as it was and just reached in with either hand, wouldn’t it? A. It could have been. Q. So you could have done that very easily, and far more practically, than to stand there with one foot over that open hole to feel? A. If I had thought it would be an open hole. Q. But you did know that there was every possibility of that elevator not being there, didn’t you? A. It could be possible.”

She testified that there was no handle to the sliding door opening into the elevator.

*514 “You open it by inserting the key and lift the latch and pull with the key in order to open the door to pull it back. It would go that far and it would stick or drag or pull very hard, you have to push it real hard to get it back, you would have to give it an extra push to get it back, to open the full width.”

The appellant offered testimony tending to prove that respondent had made statements shortly after the accident and at the hospital the next morning to the effect that the accident was her own fault. These statements were denied by her.

A court is not justified in taking the question of contributory negligence from the jury unless the acts done are so palpably negligent as to preclude the possibility of a difference of opinion concerning them. McQuillan v. Seattle, 10 Wash. 464, 38 Pac. 1119, 45 Am. St. 799; Jordan v. Seattle, 26 Wash. 61, 66 Pac. 114; Christianson v. Pacific Bridge Co., 27 Wash. 582, 68 Pac. 191; Hillebrant v. Manz, 71 Wash. 250, 128 Pac. 892; Crumrine v. Grubb, 165 Wash. 391, 5 P. (2d) 498; Nelson v. Booth Fisheries Co., 165 Wash. 521, 6 P. (2d) 388; Holm v. Investment & Securities Co., 195 Wash. 52, 79 P. (2d) 708.

The appellant strongly relies on the case of Wheeler v. Hotel Stevens Co., 71 Wash. 142, 127 Pac. 840, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 576. In that case, suit was brought for injuries sustained through a fall into an elevator shaft. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed from the judgment entered upon the verdict. The judgment was affirmed. The facts are briefly stated in the court’s opinion:

“The facts are few and simple.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 268, 199 Wash. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bender-v-white-wash-1939.