Cottman v. Federman Co.

47 N.E.2d 1009, 71 Ohio App. 89, 25 Ohio Op. 435, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 571
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 1942
Docket3531
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 47 N.E.2d 1009 (Cottman v. Federman 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
Cottman v. Federman Co., 47 N.E.2d 1009, 71 Ohio App. 89, 25 Ohio Op. 435, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 571 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Doyle, P. J.

This action was brought by the appellee, Dorothy Cottman, to recover damages for personal injuries claimed to have been the proximate result of the appellant’s negligence in maintaining an unsafe stairway in its department store. The cause was tried to a jury in the Court of Common Pleas and a verdict was returned in favor of the injured person. Upon the entry of judgment thereon appeal was prosecuted to this court by the defendant company on questions of law'.

The following specifications of negligence were plead, and were submitted to the jury:

‘41. In permitting the brass nosing which was nailed to the outer edge of the first step to become loose and worn, so that said brass nosing as well as the nails fastening the same protruded above the surface of the step.

4 4 2. In failing and neglecting to warn the plaintiff of the dangerous and unsafe condition of the said stairway, as herein set forth.

4 4 3. In failing- and neglecting to regularly inspect the condition of said steps and to keep the same in a proper state of repair so that the same would be reasonably safe for the use of the defendant’s customers, and particularly this plaintiff.”

The evidence tends to prove that the plaintiff (appellee) entered the department store of the defendant and purchased a household article; she thereupon left the store, and, while proceeding to her parked automobile, remembered that she had not obtained change *91 after payment for the article; she returned to the store, proceeded to the fourth floor, obtained her •change from the cashier, and, while starting down a flight of steps to a floor below, at which place she intended to ride the elevator, the heel of her shoe caught on a metal strip nailed to the front edge of the step and was torn from the welt, and she was thrown down the stairs and injured. The metal strip covered the front of a rubberized material used as a covering for the step and was approximately 1% inches in width.

■ That the plaintiff was an invitee at the time of the accident is without doubt. The ease must therefore be reviewed on that theory.

The first subject of inquiry will be the claim that “the court erred in admitting evidence of previous .accidents on this stairway.”

The weight of authority supports the rule which permits evidence of former accidents at a place, to ■show the dangerous character of the place, provided the relevancy of such evidence appears from the occurrence of the former accidents under substantially similar circumstances and the instruiiient or ‘agency which caused the danger was in substantially the same ■condition at the time such other accidents occurred as at the time of the accident of which complaint is made, and is not destroyed by their being so remote as to defeat the inference of persistence- of the dangerous condition to the time of subsequent injury; and provided further that there will not result, from the admission of such evidence, confusion of issues, unfair ■surprise, or prejudice disproportionate to the value of such evidence. 128 A. L. R., 599, annotation (III), citing Ohio cases at p. 601; 20 American Jurisprudence, Evidence, Section 301.

Such evidence is not competent for the purpose of ■showing independent acts of negligence, but for the *92 limited purpose of showing that the unsafe thing or condition causing the particular accident was the condition or cause common to such independent accidents, and that the frequency of such accidents tends to show knowledge of such condition. 17 Ohio Jurisprudence, Evidence, Section 183.

And it is well recognized that when evidence is admitted which is competent for one purpose and not for another it is the duty of the court, if attention is drawn to it, to state to the jury the purpose for which the evidence is admitted. Brewing Co. v. Bauer, 50 Ohio St., 560, 35 N. E., 55; Village of Lebanon v. Schwartz, 4 Ohio App., 173.

Given the legal pattern, do the facts in the instant case come within it?

The plaintiff testified that her heel caught on a metal strip or nose nailed to the front edge of the top step. One Alice Sirk testified, over the objection of the defendant, that she fell on the same stairway approximately thirteen months prior to the plaintiff’s fall, and that her fall was caused by catching her heel on the metal nosing of the third or fourth step from the top of the stairs. Another lady, Janice McClelland, testified that she fell on the same stairs approximately fifteen months prior to the time of the accident in question, and that her fall was caused by her heel catching on the metal nosing nailed on the front part of the fourth step from the top.

From the testimony of the witnesses and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, it is reasonable to reach the conclusion that the general type of construction existed at the time of the previous accidents on the steps there in question as existed on the first step of the same stairway at the time of the accident which forms the basis of the instant litigation.

As heretofore stated, one of the charges against the *93 defendant was that it permitted “the brass nosing which was nailed to the outer edge of the first step to became loose and worn, so that said.brass nosing as well as the nails fastening the same protruded above the surface of the step.” Under such a specification, evidence of similar accidents is admissible on the theory that it is within the province of a jury to draw the inference that from specific instances of observed effects there may be a tendency or capacity of producing such accidents due to the type of construction and to wear and tear. When a thing’s capacity or tendency to produce an effect of a given sort is to be evidenced by instances of the same effect found attending the same thing elsewhere, these other instances have probative value and are relevant to show tendency or capacity, but only if the conditions or circumstances in the other instances are similar to those in the case at issue. The similarity required is, however, only “a similarity in essential circumstances, or, as it is usually expressed, a substantial similarity, i. e., a similarity in su,ch circumstances or conditions as might supposedly affect the result in question.” II Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.), Section Ml et seq..

Under the state of the record it is our judgment that the evidence was competent for the limited purpose stated heretofore.

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in treating the general subject of admissibility of evidence- of this character, limits it to occurrences “under substantially the same conditions as those involved in the action,” not for the purpose of showing negligence, but for the purpose of showing knowledge on the part of the owner of the condition and as tending to show that the common cause of the damages was due to a dangerous conditioii. Jaffe v. Powell, 121 Ohio St., 355, 169 N. E., 31.

The rules pronounced by Professor Wigmore, stipra, *94

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E.2d 1009, 71 Ohio App. 89, 25 Ohio Op. 435, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottman-v-federman-co-ohioctapp-1942.