DiIorio v. Tipaldi

357 N.E.2d 319, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 640, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 784
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 357 N.E.2d 319 (DiIorio v. Tipaldi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiIorio v. Tipaldi, 357 N.E.2d 319, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 640, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 784 (Mass. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Goodman, J.

On June 25,1967, the plaintiff, Salvatore Dilorio, 1 then eleven and one-half years old, was invited to the home of the defendants, Ralph Tipaldi and Julie I. Tipaldi, to play with their two boys, seven and nine years old respectively. The Tipaldi house and the Dilorio house, both in Weston, Connecticut, were next to each other about 150 to 250 feet apart; and the children played together almost every day. That day they played from about 10:00 a.m. mostly in the Tipaldi yard and house. The weather was sunny in the morning; it then rained, cleared up, and became sunny again. The boys played in the mud, having mud fights, and about 7:00 to 7:15 in the evening went upstairs in the house to shower. After the showers an argument started between Salvatore and one of the Tipaldi boys about whose shirt was larger. Salvatore could not find his shirt and ran down to retrieve it from the porch. He ran out of the room, down the hall, down the stairs, through the living room, through the dining room, and into the glass door between the dining room and the porch. This door was a sliding panel — one of two glass panels, each about seven feet high and three feet wide (the other panel was fixed) looking out onto the porch. The sliding panel had a handle and a steel frame.

The door had been open all during the day, and it was open when the boys went upstairs to shower. Mrs. Elsie Tipaldi, the grandmother of the Tipaldi boys, who was babysitting that day, then closed the door. Salvatore testified that as he ran through the dining room toward the porch, “[a] 11 I saw was a clear passage; no distortions, no reflections, or anything on the door to indicate that it was closed. All I saw was what seemed to be clear air.” He believed that the door was open. There was no decal or other warning mark on the door, and there never had been. He also testified that it was dark in the dining room — no *642 lights were on, but he could distinguish objects, and it was not so dark that he needed artificial illumination. Outside, beyond the porch, it was beginning “to be like early twilight”; the porch was a little darker because of the roof. It was about 8:00 in the evening. During the day of the accident the boys had been in and out of the house; and Salvatore had used the open doorway to go into the house about twenty to thirty times. Further, during the five or six years he had lived next to the Tipaldis he had had occasion to open the sliding panel at least ten times.

Salvatore was severely injured by the broken glass, and he and his father, Michael Dilorio, who claimed consequential damages, brought this action of tort against the Tipaldis in the Superior Court in Essex County. (The Tipaldis were by then living in Andover, Massachusetts.) The case was tried to a jury in December, 1973, and verdicts were returned for both plaintiffs. The defendants appealed and contend that: (1) their motion for directed verdicts and motion for entry of verdicts under leave reserved should have been allowed because there was not sufficient evidence of the defendants’ negligence and because Salvatore was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, (2) the trial judge should have instructed the jury on assumption of the risk, and (3) the trial judge should not have admitted certain testimony concerning safety glass.

1. The major question argued by the defendants is whether, on the facts as the jury could have found them from the evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs and inferences therefrom, the defendants were under a duty to Salvatore in the exercise of reasonable care (as the trial judge put in his charge to the jury) to “have done something to the surface of the glass to make it visible when slid over, closed; so that not only adults would not be injured by bumping into it, but children.” 2

*643 Since the accident occurred in Connecticut the law of Connecticut measures the duty which the Tipaldis owed to Salvatore, a social invitee. Brogie v. Vogel, 348 Mass. 619, 621 (1965). Under Connecticut law the duty toward a social invitee is the same as that owed to a business invitee. Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 52-557a (1960). Kopjanski v. Festa, 160 Conn. 61, 64-65 (1970), citing Romenici v. Trumbull Elec. Mfg. Co. 145 Conn. 691, 693 (1958), which expresses that duty as one of “[d]ue care [which] required the defendant, when it knew or reasonably should have known of the dangers of the situation upon its premises, to take reasonable precautions to prevent injury to an invitee.” Compare Mounsey v. Ellard, 363 Mass. 693, 708 (1973). Where the duty of reasonable care is owed to a child, Connecticut has held that "it was not to be expected that a child would use the care of an adult One is required to use greater care where the presence of children is reasonably to be expected.” Scorpion v. American-Republican, Inc. 131 Conn. 42, 46 (1944). Compare Brown v. Knight, 362 Mass. 350, 352 (1972), where the court said: “The law, as well as adults, makes allowances for the impulsiveness and lack of maturity and experience of children.” Both in Massachusetts and in Connecticut there has been much the same adaptation of the standard of due care to the propensities of children. Compare the facts in Dennehy v. Jordan Marsh Co. 321 Mass. 78, 80-81 (1947), with those in the Scorpion case. See Breen v. Boston Housing Authy. 348 Mass. 773, 773-774 (1964); Pires v. Quick, 366 Mass. 313, 314-315 (1974). See also Altman v. Barron’s, Inc. 343 Mass. 43, 46-47 (1961).

These general standards have not — so far as the parties and our own research have discovered — been applied in Connecticut to a similar accident resulting from a collision with a glass door or other glass portion of a building. We therefore look to Massachusetts law to see how these standards have been applied to such accidents. Seemann v. Eneix, 272 Mass. 189, 195-196 (1930). Bradbury v. Central Vt. Ry. 299 Mass. 230, 233-234 (1938). Stern v. Lieber *644 man, 307 Mass. 77, 78 (1940). See Currie, On the Displacement of the Law of the Forum, 58 Col. L. Rev. 964, 969-970 (1958) . The defendants point to three Massachusetts cases in which injuries resulted from contact with glass construction in buildings and in which recovery was denied as a matter of law: Rosenberg v. Hartman, 313 Mass. 54 (1943); Valunas v. J.J. Newberry Co. Inc. 336 Mass. 305 (1957); Flynn v. F.W. Woolworth Co. 338 Mass. 789 (1959) . They argue that these cases are controlling and distinguish Jaillet v. Godfried Home Bakeries, Inc. 354 Mass. 267 (1968), in which the Supreme Judicial Court upheld a verdict for a plaintiff who had walked into a wall of glass at the entrance of the defendant’s bakery-delicatessen.

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Bluebook (online)
357 N.E.2d 319, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 640, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diiorio-v-tipaldi-massappct-1976.