District of Columbia v. Richards

128 F.2d 297, 75 U.S. App. D.C. 349, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3566
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketNo. 7830
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 128 F.2d 297 (District of Columbia v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. Richards, 128 F.2d 297, 75 U.S. App. D.C. 349, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3566 (D.C. Cir. 1942).

Opinion

RUTLEDGE, Associate Justice.

The suit is for damages for personal injuries caused by a fall. The District of Columbia owns and operates the Eastern Market. The codefendant, Stone, was lessee of a stand where he conducted a seafood business. About three o’clock in the afternoon of Thursday, July 2, 1936, plaintiff went to the Market to buy fish. While he was walking in the aisle next to Stone’s stand, according to his testimony, his left foot slipped on a piece of ice and his right foot slipped on the wet floor, so that he fell, breaking his arm and sustaining other injuries.

He claims that Stone and the District were negligent in causing the ice and water to be in the aisle, in failing to remove them or provide proper precaution against danger, as by the use of sawdust, and in other respects. The defendants denied negligence and asserted plaintiff was contribn-torily negligent. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff against both defendants. Only the District has appealed. It now claims there was no evidence of negligence, and that the court erred in overruling its [298]*298motion for a directed verdict. We think the evidence was sufficient for the jury to consider and the judgment must be affirmed.

Plaintiff does not contend that the District is liable for Stone’s negligence on re-spondeat superior. He claims each owed him an independent duty. Stone’s liability is predicated on negligently causing- the ice and water to be in the aisle and failing to remove it promptly, the District’s on failing to correct the danger after having knowledge or constructive notice, whether or not Stone’s act or business operations created it. The issues on appeal therefore come down to whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain the jury’s findings that (1) a dangerous condition existed; (2) the District had knowledge or constructive notice of it and failed to remedy it; and (3) plaintiff was not contributorily negligent. The evidence was conflicting in all these respects.

Stone’s stall was in the southeast corner of the Market, with C Street on the south, Seventh Street at the east. The stand faced westwardly to the aisle. A door led from it into C Street. Just inside the door in the aisle adjacent to Stone’s display counter was a large drain, covered with a heavy iron grating, toward which the floor inclined slightly for several feet. Behind the counter another aisle ran between it and a container for ice and foods not on display.

Except for admitted facts, plaintiff’s case rests largely on his own testimony and that of Schymansky, who worked for Stone. Plaintiff testified his left foot slipped on a piece of ice, his right on the wet floor, when the former was about a yard from the drain, the latter a foot; when he fell his body covered part of the drain; when he got up his clothing was wet on the right side; “there was water around there, all around”; there was ice in front of and beneath the counter, and “the man that worked behind the counter— for Stone — came around and taken the lid off the top of the cesspool. It was stopped up with some kind of sediment or something; he taken a broom and swept all underneath the edge of the counter and swept the water and ice down in the pool and then put the lid back on it.” He added, “There was a lot of sediment” in the drain.

Plaintiff did not see the ice before he fell — “I didn’t pay any attention to it. I started to go up to the stand to purchase fish.” He first saw the ice and water when he got up. He gave his age as seventy-one and said, “My eyesight isn’t so good,” though he also stated the day was sunny and the light clear. He had seen ice on the floor on previous occasions.

.Stone, he said, was cleaning fish, with his back to the counter, and said nothing to him. Plaintiff said nothing to Stone or anyone at the time, but went outside by the C Street door. He returned the next day and discussed the matter with the market master, and with Stone and Schymansky.

Schymansky worked for Stone regularly on Fridays, now and then at other times. He worked the day after the fall, but was unsure whether he was there the day it took place. He said that at times ice was brought in by the C Street door and dumped in a barrel near or partly over the drain, standing in the aisle. He would come out from time to time, sweep the ice and water in the aisle into the drain, and clean up its top. Water would “drop down from the case and some of it leaked in there.” Sawdust was used around the drain, and the trap would become clogged up and had to be cleaned out. He said he “could have” swept up the ice and water after plaintiff’s fall, though he probably did not. He worked from ten to four or five o’clock, and stated that ice was brought in over the trap by the iceman “sometime about ten in the morning, sometime at one or two in the afternoon.” The barrel was not removed until evening. Friday’s stock of fish, the largest, was brought in “mostly on Thursday afternoon.” When there were too many fish for the container they would be put under the stand with ice; all the ice could not be used at once, but was scooped from the barrel over the counter for use. At the end of the day they would roll the barrel around and put the remaining ice in the case. He further testified that sawdust, when it was in the aisle, would, clog up water and keep it from going down, the drain; that water and ice would extend out from the barrel a foot or a foot and a half; and that the C Street door was kept open “all the time during the summertime.”

Defendants’ witnesses contradicted much of this evidence. But, if believed, it was clearly sufficient to sustain findings that ice and water were in the aisle, and came there through Stone’s operations; that he negligently allowed them to remain without prompt and proper attention; and that they caused plaintiff’s fall and injuries. The jury could find also that the drain was clogged, causing water [299]*299to back up and, in connection with other evidence, that the District failed to clean it properly or at all on the day of the injury. It cannot be said as a matter of law that an aged man, with sight “not so good” and 'attention concentrated on the wares displayed for his purchase was contribu-torily negligent in failing to see the small pieces of cracked ice and the wet spot immediately in front of the counter.

The District insists it was not negligent, first, in that it had no knowledge or constructive notice that ice and water were in the aisle; second, because its evidence established without contradiction that the aisles were swept between two and three o’clock.

Several District witnesses, including operators of other stalls, testified they had never seen ice or water before Stone’s stand. None except Stone said he was there or saw the aisle on the afternoon of the fall. The market master testified he and his assistant (or a substitute when one of them was on leave) swept the aisles daily, beginning at the ends, between two and three, and his time sheet showed he left at three o’clock that day. Hence, it is concluded the aisle before Stone’s stand must have been cleaned very shortly before plaintiff fell. Further, the temperature at three that day was shown to be 85°, so it is urged that small pieces of ice like these could have remained unmelted for a time too short for the District to have constructive notice of its presence. This evidence, it is said, shows conclusively both that it had no notice and that it discharged fully its duty to keep the aisles clean.

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Bluebook (online)
128 F.2d 297, 75 U.S. App. D.C. 349, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-richards-cadc-1942.