City of Knoxville, Tenn. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey, Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey

222 F.2d 520, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3846
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1955
Docket12231, 12232
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 222 F.2d 520 (City of Knoxville, Tenn. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey, Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Knoxville, Tenn. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey, Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Mrs. Edna v. Bailey, 222 F.2d 520, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3846 (6th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

In this action, brought by Mrs. Edna V. Bailey for damages for personal injuries, a judgment for $30,000 on the verdict of a jury was entered in the district court, against both defendants, the City of Knoxville and Delta Air. Lines, Inc., now appellants. The judgment, is' unusual in form, in that it expressly provides that the award against the. City, of Knoxville “will be. collected only from its, insurance carrier, Great American Indemnity Company,' New1 York,” pursuant to a public liability policy issued by that compány for the protection of the City of Knoxville. The judgment provides that this limitation will in no manner restrict the collection of the award against Delta. ' Air Lines, Inc.

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Mrs. Bailey was injured by . falling, while, attempting to descend from, one platform, or .landing to another adjacent to the building at the municipal airport owned and operated by the City of Knoxville. The Delta Air Lines leaséd from,, the city space in the terminal building for customary commercial usage of. an air line and, by contract with the city, used the airport facilities for the landing, and taking off of its planes and for. receiving and discharging its passengers. ' Mrs. Bailey entered the terminal building through the entrance provided, around seven o’clock in the evening when it was still light on a clear day in the latter part of June, with the intention of flying to Chicago an hour later aboard a passenger plane of the Delta Air Lines. She had already purchased her ticket at a downtown office. She was accompanied by her older sister and a niece, Mrs. Russell, who attended to checking her luggage.

The three ladies sat for a while within the terminal building but decided to go outside because, of the extreme heat inside the building. They attempted to make their exit through the same door and over the same landings and steps by which they had entered. Upon reaching the six-inch drop from the first to the second landing, Mrs. Bailey fell to her right over the abutments to the stairs and thence several feet to the ground below. Her niece testified that, as Mrs. Bailey fell, she had her hands outstretched trying to grasp something. The.én-trance to the airport building was some five feet above the surface of the ground and was reached by means of a number of steps and landings constructed of tile.

' In her complaint, appellee charged, that the tile utilized in the construction of the 'steps and landings was uniform in size and color and was so blended that a- person using the landings would be unable to differentiate between the various levels in making entrance to or exit from the building. It,was averred that one landing, some six tiles in width, was flush with the level of the terminal.floor; and that contiguous thereto, at a lower elevation, there was a second landing approximately nine tiles in width. The complaint charged that the two described landings .were so laid and blended that persons utilizing the airport’s facilities would believe that only one landing existed, when, as a matter of- fact, there was a difference in elevation of about ten inches between the two.

The complaint charged that the situation described constituted “a dangerous ! pitfall or trap”; and that, though aware of existing conditions which had caused *523 many people to be injured in consequence of the negligence in construction and maintenance of the landings, defendants had refused and neglected to place any warning signs near the landings and had wrongfully refused and neglected to put guards or handrails at or near the landings in such manner as to make safe entrance to the terminal building, or exit therefrom. The complaint averred further that, in making her exit upon the landing flush with the terminal floor, Mrs. Bailey continued to walk thereon in the belief that the lower landing, due to its aforementioned appearance, was of the same elevation as the first. Wherefore, she unexpectedly stepped to the lower landing and fell.

Mrs. Bailey was corroborated by a graduate engineer as to the appearance of the landing from which she stumbled. This witness testified that a person, standing inside the doorway of the terminal building and looking toward the outside, would find it very hard to tell that there is a six-inch step-down for the reason that the tile on the landings is of the same hue and color. The contractor who had installed the guardrail stated that he placed it four and one-half feet from where Mrs. Bailey stepped down, the guardrail being “intended solely to protect the people who were walking down the nine flights of stairs” and not to afford protection to anyone four and one-half feet away. Mrs. Bailey was at that distance from the handrail when she stumbled.

Two Delta Air Lines porters were eyewitnesses to the accident. One testified that Mrs. Bailey started to make her step at the step-off, “missed seeing it or couldn’t see it, or didn’t” and fell slantingly off the side of the porch. He stated that he had seen quite a few other people stumble at that first step-off. The other porter related that he was watching the three ladies as they came out of the terminal building; that they were walking slowly abreast over the first landing when Mrs. Bailey stumbled and fell to the right “plumb off to the' ground”; and that he had jumped up and tried to catch her, but couldn’t. He stated that he had seen a few other people stumble or fall at that particular step-down. He said further that the tile was “kind of reddish in color” and that if a person were coming out of the building, all the tile looked as if it were even.

An American Air Lines employee working at the airport also saw Mrs. Bailey fall. She was “tripping * * * like someone going off balance” when she was just past the first step, he said. The witness had observed some others receive “a jolt or unexpected shock by not anticipating that one step.” Another American Air Lines worker, employed in the terminal building, was in his office on the ground floor; and, while he did not see Mrs. Bailey fall, he heard a thud and, when he looked out, saw the appellee lying prone on the ground. He previously had seen four or five people stumble at the step-off where Mrs. Bailey fell. He said that the step-off “wasn’t easy to see * * * it didn’t just flare up there when you came out. It was kind of hard to see unless you were looking for it.”

A surgeon who had attended Mrs. Bailey professionally lived near the airport and was a frequent visitor there. Accompanied by Mrs. Bailey’s son, he visited the airport the day after her accident. He testified that the step where she fell was “very poorly” observable by one coming out of the terminal building, for the reason that the “two platforms are identical in color and blend together” to give a “misguided sense of walking on level ground.”

The niece who accompanied Mrs. Bailey testified that, when walking from inside the terminal building, the step-down could not be observed because the tile is all of the same color and gives the general appearance “of being just one straight place.” She said that the guardrail starts farther down at the “real steps” some six feet away from the first step-down where Mrs. Báiley fell. The witness was positive in her statement that, to one coming out of the building and making an exit over the first landing, the tile, being the same color and pattern, “causes a mi *524 rage” and makes the. landings look the same “all the way down.” Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
222 F.2d 520, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-knoxville-tenn-v-mrs-edna-v-bailey-delta-air-lines-inc-v-ca6-1955.