Benjamin v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.

23 N.E.2d 447, 62 Ohio App. 83, 15 Ohio Op. 442, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 439
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.E.2d 447 (Benjamin v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 23 N.E.2d 447, 62 Ohio App. 83, 15 Ohio Op. 442, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 439 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Oveemykb, J.

In its assignments of error the appellant complains that the trial court should have directed a verdict in its favor; that there was error in the special instructions and general charge, in the admission of evidence, and in argument; and that the verdict is excessive and the result of passion and prejudice.

The operative facts giving rise to the action may be briefly stated as follows:

In appellant’s six-story building in Toledo, there is a stairway about 22 feet long and 6 feet wide leading from the street floor to the basement — the basement being a display and sales room for sporting goods, plumbing supplies and other merchandise. The stairway descends through a rectangular stair well cut into the street floor, the opening being surrounded on three sides by a guard railing or banister apparently about three feet high, making a U-shaped opening. Resting on a narrow ledge on the inside of the closed end of the U and fastened with aluminum wires to the banister, was a solid wooden display or advertising sign about six feet long and three or four feet wide, weighing from forty to fifty pounds.

On the date referred to appellee and his wife had purchased plumbing fixtures in the basement, then went to the offices on an upper floor, and on returning *85 to the basement by way of the stairway and when near the bottom of it and almost directly beneath the sign referred to, the sign in some manner became dislodged and crashed down onto the stairway, striking appellee and injuring him.

The amended petition charged negligence on the part of the company in the erection and maintenance of said sign in such dangerous, unstable and insecure position above the stairs as to constitute a menace and a nuisance; that the injuries suffered by appellee were proximately caused by the negligent, careless and reckless erection and maintenance thereof in that in its position it was constantly subject to gravitational forces tending to pull it down; that the same was not securely anchored and fastened; that appellant failed to inspect it regularly to ascertain its safety; that no screen or net was maintained beneath it to arrest its fall; and that no warning signs were posted to warn customers of the possibility of its falling onto and into the stairway.

It is claimed by appellee that the facts here call for the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. The case was tried, however, on the allegations of negligence charged in the petition, appellee not thereby waiving his right to the application of the rule. 29 Ohio Jurisprudence, 650, Section 164. Appellant contends it was not a res ipsa case and that a verdict should have been directed in its favor for the reason that there was no direct evidence that the sign fell as a result of negligence on the part of the company, and that no inference of negligence on the part of the company arose, because of the fact that two employees of the company testified that just before the sign fell they saw a little boy, the son of other customers then on the street floor, playing about the banister where the sign was located and to which it was fastened, and that he was . kicking at the banister spindles and the sign. Appellant relies largely for its claim in this *86 respect on the following cases: Loomis v. Toledo Railways & Light Co., 107 Ohio St., 161, 140 N. E., 639; Stinson v. N. Y. C. Rd. Co., 30 Ohio App., 539, 165 N. E., 860; Sullivan v. Minn. Street Ry. Co., 161 Minn., 45, 200 N. W., 922; Sherlock v. Strouss-Hirshberg Co., 132 Ohio St., 35, 4 N. E. (2d), 912.

We are unable to comprehend, however, how the facts shown in those cases can determine the non-applicability of the rule of res ipsa in the present case. Here we have no vis major intervening as was undisputedly the situation in the Loomis, case, an agency over which no one had control. Nor do we have here a case where the plaintiff himself set in motion the intervening agency, as in the Stinson case, nor slippery conditions of a street car track on a public street, as in the Sullivan case where plaintiff was the appellant, nor an absence of evidence as to who placed the object in its position where it injured the customer, as in the Sherlock case. In the last case the court well inquires: “Who placed the stool in the aisle?” Here we know who erected and maintained the sign in its dangerous position. It is not every intervening cause that relieves a defendant from his negligence. First National Bank of Warren v. Gillen, 7 C. C. (N. S.), 33, 17 C. D., 609.

In our view, the exclusive control of this sign rested at all times, from the time of the erection of it to the time of its falling, upon the company and its servants. The responsibility for the safety of the sign and for its falling also rested on the company, for, is it unreasonable to say that the company should have reasonably anticipated that a child, or adult customer for that matter, might, even entirely innocently, jostle or bump loose a sign so lightly secured in so dangerous a location? In any event, there is no evidence that the child’s playing or kicking caused this sign to fall. He is said to have been playing about the banister and kicking at the upright spindles of .the banister and per *87 haps at the sign, but not a single one'of the company’s employees who testified had examined the sign to see what had caused it to become loosened from its moorings, whether it was kicked off the narrow ledge and in falling tore loose the aluminum wires with which it was fastened, or whether the weight of the sign gradually had pulled loose those wires, of what the conditions of the sign and wires later might have disclosed as to the cause of its fall; nor was the sign itself produced in court. We are not advised on this subject by the record. But the sign, erected by the company in a dangerous position and there maintained by it, fell on the appellee and injured him, without any possible fault on his part. He could not well have been looking over his head when he was going down the stairway. It is not unreasonable to say that a duty rested upon the company’s employees who saw what they now say they saw, to have made the boy desist if they thought he was endangering the security of the sign.

We are content, on the question of the application of the res ipsa doctrine in this case, to rest our views on the authority of Glowacki v. North Western Ohio Ry. & P. Co., 116 Ohio St., 451, 157 N. E., 21, 53 A. L. R., 1486; Weller, Exrx., v. Worstall, 129 Ohio St., 596, 196 N. E., 637; Sweeney v. Erving, 228 U. S., 233, 57 L. Ed., 815, 33 S. Ct., 416;

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E.2d 447, 62 Ohio App. 83, 15 Ohio Op. 442, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-sears-roebuck-co-ohioctapp-1939.