Dunn v. First Nat. Bank of Portland

39 P.2d 944, 149 Or. 97, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 143
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 944 (Dunn v. First Nat. Bank of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. First Nat. Bank of Portland, 39 P.2d 944, 149 Or. 97, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 143 (Or. 1934).

Opinions

BAILEY, J.

Plaintiff brings this action for damages for personal injuries sustained by her on falling as she emerged from plaintiff’s building through a revolving door. From judgment in favor of the defendant this appeal is prosecuted.

*99 The complaint alleges that the defendant, a banking corporation, was located and maintained its principal place of business at the southwest corner of Fifth and Stark streets in Portland, Oregon; that the means of egress and ingress on Fifth street was by way of three separate and distinct sets of revolving doors; and that immediately adjacent to the “most northerly exit and revolving door, there is a perpendicular drop immediately to the east of said doorway and revolving door, so that the level of the walkway which persons use to said northerly exit and revolving door is on a higher level than the sidewalk immediately east and adjacent thereto ’ ’.

On November 15,1930, plaintiff entered defendant’s place of business as a depositor and client of the defendant bank and on leaving the premises she passed through the northerly revolving door on Fifth street, and “through the carelessness and negligence of the defendant * *• * [was] precipitated upon said drop-off and received severe and permanent injuries”. The negligence charged to the defendant consisted in (1) the carelessness and negligence of said defendant in failing “to maintain a walkway and means of egress to the said bank so that the clients would wall?: down a gradual incline instead of being compelled to pass over an abrupt and sudden drop-off maintained in the immediate proximity to the revolving doorway, which rendered said means of egress extremely dangerous and hazardous”; (2) defendant’s failure to warn the plaintiff and its other patrons of the “existence and presence of said perpendicular drop-off”; and (3) “that said defendant at said time and place carelessly and negligently maintained an abrupt and sudden drop-off as aforesaid in connection with said exitway immediately adjacent to the revolving doorway, which *100 rendered said means of egress extremely dangerous and hazardous to clients using the same”.

After admitting that the plaintiff was on the hank’s premises- on business with the bank and that she was injured, the defendant in its answer alleged that the injuries sustained by plaintiff were the proximate result of her carelessness and negligence “in failing to recall and observe that said entrance and sidewall? were wet with rain and that there was a slight perpendicular drop from said entrance-way to said sidewalk, of from two to three inches, and in failing to keep a proper or any lookout or to observe the condition of said entrance-way and sidewalk”. These allegations of contributory negligence were denied in plaintiff’s reply.

The Cause was submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The evidence discloses that the sidewalk on Fifth street slopes down slightly to the north. Two of the three entrances on Fifth street are on a level with the sidewalk, while the third and most northerly entrance is from two and one-half to three inches above the sidewalk.

There was prepared and introduced as an exhibit in the case a plan of the last-mentioned entrance, with its revolving door, drawn to scale. According to this drawing the entrance is in form of a circle about six and one-half feet in diameter, and the door, consisting of four partitions or flanges fastened together at the center of the circle, divides the entrance space into four practically equal compartments. The partitions are curved, made on heavy metal framework, and constructed of panel glass to within twenty-four inches of the floor. They are equipped with rubber strips at the edges, which through the door’s entire revolution contact the circular walls and provide resistance which pre *101 vents the doors from moving except with the exertion of considerable force upon them. About waist-high across the glass of each partition is a bar which may be grasped by any one using the door.

Approximately one-fourth of the circumference of the circle within which the door revolves, or a segment on an arc of about five feet, opens upon the sidewalk, and the opposite quarter of the circumference opens into defendant’s banking quarters. At the street opening there are brass grooves or tracks outlining the circular floor and forming part of the course of sliding doors which are put in place when the bank is closed.

The circular entrance in which the door revolves is floored with marble. Outside the entrance the space between the sliding door grooves and the sidewalk is laid with granite, which is approximately nine and one-half inches wide at the middle of the entrance and, as before stated, two and one-half to three inches higher than the sidewall?.

At the time of the accident the plaintiff was about fifty-two years of age and weighed one hundred eighty-five pounds. For about a year she had been a customer of the bank and had made a number of visits to it on business, although when entering or leaving the Fifth street side she had always, prior to the accident, as she remembered, used either of the southerly doors. On this particular call at the bank she was accompanied by her husband and on leaving used the most northerly door to suit his convenience.

She entered the door while it was moving, as she says, “fast”, and she took hold of the horizontal bar across the glass in front of her. Her husband let one or two partitions pass and then stepped into one of the compartments. The door, he says, was then moving rapidly as though being pushed forcibly by some one who was entering the building.

*102 The plaintiff did not observe the drop from the outside granite step to the sidewalk. As the door came to the outer opening there was a sudden jar, she says, and she stepped forward. In her own words, she “made the step and came down off of the step [the outer granite flooring] ”. In some manner she fell upon her hands and knees and rolled to her side.

On cross-examination she testified as follows:

“Q. And you think there was somebody going the other way?
“A. I think there was. There was a jar when I stepped through.
“Q. Was it that jar that knocked you down to the pavement?
“A. I think it was.
“ Q. In other words, you were going through here, and a sudden jar, and that jar knocked you down to the pavement?
.“A. Yes, sir. It was a step, I stepped through the door there, and the jar, and I came down over the step.
“ Q. I see; the jar knocked you down, and when you came down you came over the step?
• “A. The jar ... I just jarred through and came down over the step.
“Q. Oh, you think that somebody on the other side made a jar, and that jar is what knocked you down, and then you fell over that step?
“A. I can’t explain just exactly the way it was.”
On.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 944, 149 Or. 97, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-first-nat-bank-of-portland-or-1934.