Coggins v. Hanchette

338 P.2d 379, 52 Cal. 2d 67, 1959 Cal. LEXIS 181
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1959
DocketL. A. 25295
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 338 P.2d 379 (Coggins v. Hanchette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coggins v. Hanchette, 338 P.2d 379, 52 Cal. 2d 67, 1959 Cal. LEXIS 181 (Cal. 1959).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

Plaintiff appeals from an adverse judgment in her action to recover for personal injuries suffered when she slipped and fell on a floor undergoing repairs. We have concluded that plaintiff’s complaints of prejudicial error in the jury instructions are without merit, and that the judgment should be affirmed.

*70 It should he noted at the outset that the sole party defendant was not an owner or lessee of the premises wherein the accident occurred and that her only right to be in the premises, or to exercise any control thereover, was that which was incident to the performance of certain work pursuant to a contract hereinafter described.

On the day of the accident, in September, 1954, plaintiff was employed as a training supervisor by Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company in San Pedro, with the duty of supervising and instructing student employes in the handling of long distance, or toll, operating. This work was done in a room known as the ‘‘ training room. ’ ’ Defendant was engaged in the business of selling and installing floor coverings such as linoleum and asphalt tile. In August, 1954, defendant and the telephone company entered into a contract whereby defendant agreed to remove strips of maseapave linoleum from the concrete floor of a room in the telephone company building, called the ‘‘ equipment room, ’ ’ and cover the entire floor with asphalt tile. One of defendant’s employes, Eoy Burrow, a tile mechanic who had been in the employ of defendant for some 18 years, was engaged in the work on the day of the accident; he was defendant’s only employe on the premises on that day.

The equipment room was located adjacent to and immediately south of the training room in which plaintiff, her students, and other supervisors and students were working. To gain entrance into the training room it was necessary to pass through the equipment room from an entrance in the west wall of the latter room, then through a door located about midway in the south wall of the training room. Before the day of the accident the equipment room floor had a painted cement surface, maroon colored, with a strip of the same color linoleum cemented to the floor to provide walkways to and from the training room door through the equipment room. This linoleum runner was about 3 feet wide and extended generally in an easterly direction from the equipment room door, with its nearest edge about 3 feet south of the wall separating the two rooms, to a point opposite the training room door where it turned north to the training room entrance. As hereinafter appears, there is some conflict in the evidence as to whether this runner had been removed prior to the time of the accident.

Plaintiff and her assistant, Mrs. Marich, testified that when they went to work at 7 a. m. on that day, and when they left the training room for coffee at 9 a. m. and returned about 9:15, the linoleum runner was still in place. Mrs. Marich further *71 testified that when she went to the lounge for five minutes between 10 a. m. and 11 a. m. she noticed the runner had been removed. Two other telephone company employes, Mrs. Everett and Mrs. Peters, testified that they saw the runner in place about 8 a. m., but when they returned from their relief periods between 10 a. m. and 10:30 a. m. it had been taken up and the walkway was grayish in color.

Except for the 15-minute coffee break between 9 and 9:15 a. m. plaintiff remained in the training room from 7 until 11 a. m. While instructing students at the switchboard, which was located in the southeast portion of the training room, she wore a headset with one earphone and a mouthpiece and stood, or sat on a high stool nearby, where she could observe them. The students wore similar headsets. For verbal instructions all sat at a table located in the west portion of the training room, and wore no headsets. The door to the training room opened inward to that room and closed automatically; it was closed on the day of the accident.

Plaintiff testified that she had not been advised that work was to be done or was being done on the equipment room floor. When she returned from coffee at 9:15 she noticed that some sanding had been done, but no one was working on the floor at that time and the linoleum runner was still there. Between 9:15 and 10 a. m. she heard a noise which sounded like a vacuum cleaner but which stopped about 10 a. m., and some time between 10 and 11 a. m. she saw a man open the training room door and stick his head into the room for a few seconds. She was on the west side of the room; he did not look in her direction and she did not hear him say anything. She was aware, however, that “work was going on” in the equipment room at the time. At 11 a. m. plaintiff left the training room for lunch; her students had preceded her by two or three minutes, without incident. Plaintiff further testified that she opened the door, “took about one step out,” bringing her foot approximately 12 inches into the equipment room, when her feet or foot slipped out from under her and she fell to the floor, thereby fracturing her wrist. She came to rest in a sitting position, her hips (at least in part) and her legs and feet extending out in the mastic emulsion diagonally away from the pathway leading from the training room door but her hand and fractured wrist being back on the “bare cement” of the “three-foot pathway.” She “noticed there was this three-foot pathway running west ’ ’ but did not ‘‘ ever observe whether it went to the door.” She looked back to see what had caused *72 her to slip, and saw a 3-inch oblong spot of mastic about 12 inches from the training room doorway; the spot had a skid mark through it. She then noticed for the first time that the linoleum runner had been removed and that, except for the strip or pathway of bare floor about 3 feet wide immediately adjacent to the partition wall separating the two rooms and extending westerly from the training room door toward the door of the equipment room, the equipment room floor appeared to be covered with mastic. She saw no marking on the border of the pathway. When asked “Where were you looking as you walked out the door [from the training room to the equipment room],” she replied “I don’t remember where I was looking—straight ahead of me, I guess. ’ ’

Defendant’s employe, Burrow, testified that on the morning of the accident he had unloaded the sanding machine, asphalt tile, and tools for the floor job and was ready to commence work about 9:15 a. m. He knew telephone company personnel were using the training room and at that time he opened the training room door, put his head in, and said “I am going to be working out here, watch your step.” He then closed the door and proceeded to remove a 9-inch strip of tile from the equipment room floor, which took about four minutes. He testified that he neither saw nor removed any linoleum from the floor. He spent the next 45 minutes to an hour sanding the entire floor except for an area in the northwest corner, and about five minutes sweeping it. About 10:15 a. m. he struck off a “pathway” outlined with bright blue chalk, 3 feet from the partition wall, and thereupon walked into the training room, stood holding the door knob at arm’s length, and spoke to the person he took to be the supervisor (later identified as Mrs. Everett) sitting on a high stool near the switchboard. He “informed her ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
338 P.2d 379, 52 Cal. 2d 67, 1959 Cal. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coggins-v-hanchette-cal-1959.