Bohn Bros. v. Turner

182 S.W.2d 419, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 863
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 1944
DocketNo. 9452.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 419 (Bohn Bros. v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohn Bros. v. Turner, 182 S.W.2d 419, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 863 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

Appellees, the seven children and only heirs of Mrs. Mary Anne Gray, deceased, sued appellants, Bohn Brothers, a partnership, and its members, for damages for her death, which occurred when she fell down the basement stairs in appellants’ store. The accident happened when she' was seeking a rest room in the rear of the store where appellants’ employees had directed her to go. About fifteen minutes later she was found unconscious lying at the foot of the basement stairs, and she died three hours later without having regained consciousness. It was alleged and the jury found that appellants were negligent in failing to have the door to the basement stairs locked or guarded; in failing to have a receiving room for merchandise, through which she had to pass to reach the rest room, sufficiently lighted; in maintaining the basement stairs in a dangerous condition; and in failing to warn her of the dangerous condition of the stairs. The jury also found that each of such acts of negligence was a proximate cause of the death of Mrs. Gray. Upon these and other findings judgment was rendered for $2,369, of which the jury awarded $1.500 to Sebe Gray, the unmarried daughter, $500 to Mrs. Ada Gray Turner, a widowed daughter, and $369 as reasonable and necessary ambulance, hospital and funeral expenses, and for a tombstone to the grave of the deceased.

The first five points of appellants present the contentions that the evidence is insufficient to support either of the alleged acts of negligence found by the jury, or the jury’s findings that each of such acts of negligence was a proximate cause of the death of Mrs. Gray; and that the evidence as a matter of law showed her own negligence caused her death. Neither contention is sustained.

The store fronts west, has a ground floor and a basement used for the heating plant. A room for receiving merchandise in the rear of the store is twelve feet from west to east, eight feet from north to south, and eight feet high. It is reached from the store through an aisle 5½ feet wide between shelves or cabinets, and thence through a door in the west wall of the room, which door is kept open, or was open at the time of the accident. This room has a door in the north wall to the basement stairs, and a door in the south wall to the rest room, which is used by the public patronizing or going in the store. Double doors in the east wall open to the public alley, and through which merchandise is received. All of these doors were closed at the time of the accident, except the entrance door, which was fully opened back against the north wall of the room. Neither door was marked nor displayed any sign, notice or warning as to its use or purpose, and each door was of dark or walnut color. The door to the stair and the door to the rest room were similar in size and appearance. The door to the basement stairs was not marked, locked, nor guarded. It opened to the right, over the landing or top tread of the stairs, which turned immediately down to the left, and were very steep. The landing or top tread was a continuation of the floor of the receiving room. A piece three-fourths of an inch wide was split off the edge of the landing next to the stairs from the door-facing and out to about midway of the landing. The door would not fully open because of a metal fuse box constructed on the opposite wall of the stairs. It opened only two feet and eleven inches from the . door facing out to the farthest point the door would open, thus making the landing *421 or top tread wedge shape with the point of the wedge, or narrowest part of the landing or top tread, at the outer edge of the open door. A plat and photograph of the cjoor and landing or top tread of the stairs show that if a person should step through the door to the landing and try to close the door, the person would have to step down at least one step to do so. The door was closed when Mrs. Gray was discovered lying at the foot of the stairway in the basement. The stair steps were walled in on both sides down two inches past the fourth step, but the remaining eight steps were open on one side and had no handrail or guard.

The receiving room had an electric ceiling light, which was not burning at the time of the accident. A witness testified that a person could see to get about in the receiving room without the artificial light, but that it was not well lighted by the windows. The basement had two electric ceiling lights, burning at the time of the accident, but the rays of these lights do not reflect on the stairs down to the fourth step from the top, because the stairs are walled in down to this point on both sides.

Immediately before the accident Mrs. Gray, her daughter Sebe, and a friend, Miss Wolfenbarger, were together in the store. Mrs. Gray left her companions where they were looking at some merchandise in the men’s department on the north side of the store, and asked a saleslady in the south part and near the front of the store where the rest room was, and was told by her “that there was one in the back, and that she could go back there and turn to the right.” Mrs. Gray proceeded eastward along the counter near the south wall of the store to within about 23 or 24 feet of the door to the receiving room, at which point she asked another saleslady where the rest room was, and was told by her “through the door and to the right,” which instruction was accompanied by a motion of the right hand of the saleslady who was facing north, intending, according to her statement, to thereby indicate that the rest room was through the receiving room door and to the right after entering the room. Mrs. Gray, however, was facing south and when she turned to enter the aisle between the shelves she was facing and going north, and from this position and for a part of the way in the aisle the door leading to the basement was visible and was to her right. The door to the receiving room was opened back against the wall at the time. After-entering the receiving room the rest room door was to the” right, but before turning to the right a person would have to go one foot and ten inches, the width of a table, then to the right fotir feet and six inches, the length of the table, and then to the rest room door. Some fifteen minutes after Mrs. Gray left the saleslady, the daughter and friend asked the saleslady if she had seen an elderly lady, and she told them that such lady had gone to the rest room. The saleslady then went to the rest room, and not finding Mrs. Gray there she opened the door to the basement stairs, and looking down saw Mrs. Gray lying at the foot of the stairs on the basement floor. A doctor was called and arrived in about ten minutes. Mrs. Gray was taken to a hospital by ambulance, where she died about three hours later.

In the main the foregoing facts are undisputed. No one saw the accident, and since Mrs. Gray died without having regained ■ consciousness the jury had to find from the circumstances, or from reasonable inference from the facts and circumstances proved, how Mrs. Gray met her death, and to further find whether any negligent act or omission of appellants was a proximate cause of her death. From the place Mrs. Gray was standing when she received the last instruction to go “through the door and to the right,” she was either in the aisle between the shelves and counter, or she would have to go through the aisle or opening between the shelves and cabinets to reach the receiving room and then the rest room. In either event she had to first go north to reach the receiving room before turning to the right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 419, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohn-bros-v-turner-texapp-1944.