Braman v. Stewart

108 N.W. 964, 145 Mich. 548, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 808
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1906
DocketDocket No. 121
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 108 N.W. 964 (Braman v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braman v. Stewart, 108 N.W. 964, 145 Mich. 548, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 808 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Blair, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant, the proprietor and operator of the Sherman House hotel in Mt. Clemens, in not keeping certain brass strips or nose pieces fastened to the front or outside edge of each tread or step of a stairway in said hotel in a proper state of repair, whereby the plaintiff, while carefully descending the stairs, caught the heel of her shoe on [549]*549one of said brasses and was precipitated to the bottom of the stairway, suffering serious injuries. The trial judge directed a verdict for the following reasons:

“ There is no dispute in this case but that the plaintiff on the evening of August 4, 1903, fell down the "stairs of the Sherman House and was seriously injured; but the defendant, Mrs. Stewart, cannot be held liable for the resulting damage unless she was in some way to blame for the accident; unless some duty of hers was neglected with regard to providing a reasonably safe stairs or means of access from one floor to another, of her hotel. The questions, then, in this case are:
“First. Were these stairs in a reasonably safe and fit condition to be used for the purpose they were made for, at the time of the accident ?
Second. Was Mrs. Braman’s fall due to any defect in or on the stairway ?
Third. If it was due to a defect in the stairway, was that defective condition that may have caused the accident known to Mrs. Stewart, or was it such a defect as ordinary supervision, care, and prudence on her part, would have brought to her knowledge ?
‘ ‘ Fourth. Was plaintiff herself in the exercise of due care at the time of the accident ?
“Now, while these may be questions of fact ordinarily for a jury to pass upon, and not for the court to determine, yet, as I understand the rule, whenever, in any case, the court becomes satisfied that the great weight of the evidence is on one side or the other of a case, and to such an extent that in case a verdict were rendered against the side so having the greater weight of evidence in its favor that the court would be in duty bound to set aside that verdict and order a retrial, then it becomes the duty of the court to assume the entire responsibility, and to direct a verdict.
“Now, in this case, it seems to me that while some evidence has been introduced by the plaintiff, tending to show that she fell down those stairs by tripping upon one of the brass pieces, called ‘nose pieces,’ that were screwed to the front edge of each step, yet it seems to me the case is wholly wanting in evidence fairly tending to prove that plaintiff fell down stairs by reason, or because of any defective nose piece or want of repair in the stairs; nor is there, in my opinion, evidence upon which a verdict should be permitted to be based, showing that these stairs, at the [550]*550time of this accident, were either so faultily constructed or so out of repair as to make them unsafe for use in traveling up and down by persons who were themselves in the exercise of due care; or that the defendant’s attention had ever been called to any claimed defect either in their construction or their defective condition by reason of wear and tear.”

We think the casé should have been submitted to the jury.

The plaintiff testified:

“That day, as I arrived at the top of the stairs, my husband was with me, a little behind; he stopped to lock the door, and I started on ahead of him. I supposed the stairs in a public place are perfectly safe. I simply stood at the stairs as I do always when I come to a new pair or stairs, take my bearings, as they would say, and go very carefully. I size the stairs up to see that I know what they are like, and go down carefully as I can. I was on the west side of the stairs; the right hand side. As I went down I tripped the heel of my shoe on the brasses, and it simply pitched me forward like that, and the first thing I knew, I was going so-fashion downstairs. * * *
“ I had a talk with Mrs. Stewart in relation to my injury, and reference was made to the stairway. She met me in the hallway and asked me how my hand was, and I told her it wasn’t any better; it seemed to me just the same; and I said to Mrs. Stewart: ‘ I am a poor advertisement for your house, because when I go on the street, people ask me “What’s the matter” with me; and I tell them that I came here well, and am going home a cripple; that I fell down the stairs at the Sherman House; and they ask me what is the matter with the stairs at the Sherman House.’ She said that I was lucky; there were others.”

Plaintiff’s husband testified:

“The stairway has from the bottom 10 or 11 straight steps, ordinary steps; above that 4 steps with an angle, forming the angle of the steps, what might be called the wind, where the stairs turned to goat a right angle to the first stairs. They turn to the right or to the left. They turn to the right going up, to the left coming down. There were 4 steps there that were narrower on the right and wider as you go to the wall. I should judge it [551]*551was 4 inches wide, wide enough to take one spindle; possibly 18 or 20 inches wide at, the wall; above those stairs there were more straight steps after you made your turn and then the landing at the top; a hand rail on the right hand side as you go up; but none on the left hand side towards the wall. * * * When we got to the stairway, my wife was ahead, and she went on down the stairway or started to go. She was probably on the— well, she was on the last two steps, I should judge; I couldn’t tell for her clothes, but I should judge she had one foot on the next to the last lower step and one foot on the last lower step in the wind, and I had just come around the corner and was at the top; I had just got started down possibly three or four steps back of her and she tripped and threw out her hand and fell. * * * After the accident, I observed the condition of the steps. They were covered with a rubber sheet of corrugated rubber. There was a space between the wall and the rubber, and a space between the spindles and the rubber of 5 or 6 inches. The fastening was what they call a nosing of thin, hard sheet brass, brought up over the edge and partly on the top of the step similar to that one that you have, only thinner, and there was no indications of a corrugation extending along the same as that one has. There might been on the under side but there was not on the top; it was smooth. My recollection is that the entire piece was smooth. It may have been slightly corrugated at the bottom. It was put on the step, the brass was fastened on the under side of the steps. It left it raised above the rubber as the rubber would wear away. Immediately after the accident the top of it was not level; it was uneven on the edges, wavy, and in places there were places that were raised as if something had been struck against it and raised the edge of the brass. My impression is that the top of the nosing was raised up from the rubber as it was torn away from a quarter to three-eighths in places. I didn’t measure it. * * *
“ I have seen those strips since. Out of those I have noticed, they were all put on with the screw on the top with the exception of one that I noticed, that had the screws on the edge, and none on the bottom of the brass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.W. 964, 145 Mich. 548, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braman-v-stewart-mich-1906.