East Tennessee Light & Power Co. v. Gose

130 S.W.2d 984, 23 Tenn. App. 280, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 8, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 984 (East Tennessee Light & Power Co. v. Gose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Tennessee Light & Power Co. v. Gose, 130 S.W.2d 984, 23 Tenn. App. 280, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

McAMIS, J.

Plaintiff below, G. C. Gose, sustained personal injuries when he fell through an open trap door in the grocery store of Kelly Godsey in Bristol, Tennessee, on July 12, 1937.

The declaration, containing a single count, charges that the defendants Kelly Godsey and East Tennessee Light and Power Company negligently left said trap door open and that plaintiff, who had entered the store for the purpose of selling vegetables, as he had often theretofore done, having no knowledge of the opening or pitfall thus negligently created, stepped or fell into the opening and was precipitated with great force into the basement, landing on a concrete floor and sustaining the injuries for which he sues. Both defendants filed separate pleas of the general issue and, at the conclusion of all the evidence, separately moved the court for a directed verdict. Both motions were overruled and the case submitted to the jury with the result that the jury returned a verdict in the sum of $3,500 against the defendant East Tennessee Light and Power Company and in favor of the defendant Godsey. Its motion for a new trial having been overruled, the East Tennessee Light and Power Company, herein referred to by name or as defendant, has appealed in error to this court.

Plaintiff has filed the record for writ of error and has assigned as error the action of the court in suggesting a remittitur of $500 which was accepted under protest: Defendant’s assignments will be first considered.

Plaintiff was sixty-six years of age at the time he was injured on July 12, 1937. He entered the store of Kelly Godsey for the purpose of selling beans or exchanging them for groceries. He had been in *283 the store on several previous occasions over a period of several years for the purpose of selling vegetables to Godsey but had never succeeded in making any sales. He had no express invitation to visit the store for this purpose. He was rendered unconscious by the fall and remembers little of what occurred after he entered the store. The clerk at the meat counter testified that he saw him enter and walk up to the meat counter where he inquired about selling beans. The clerk at the meat counter advised him that the buying was done on the other side of the store, and he walked over in that direction. In doing so he fell into the trap door leading into the basement. On the date in question the Power Company, in response to a call from Godsey, had sent two of its repairmen to Godsey’s store for the purpose of making repairs on certain refrigeration machinery located in the basement of the store and used by Godsey in the operation of his store. The trap door was the only means of access to the basement. The repairmen had been in the basement of the store on previous occasions for the same purpose and, upon entering the store, they went to the trap door, raised and removed it, leaving an opening of about three and one-half feet by four feet near the center of an aisle or passageway between counters used by customers in examining goods on display and in passing from one part of the store to another.

Upon the lid being removed one of the repairmen descended to the basement, the other remaining near the opening to place, or assist in placing, obstructions in the aisle for the purpose of blocking off the opening. On the side from which plaintiff later approached, an empty orange crate and another box of similar dimensions were placed across the aisle in front of the opening. The other repairman then descended into the basement where he was at work when plaintiff fell.

Plaintiff testified that, because of defective vision, he could not see well after coming into the store; that he could see well enough to see a man in front of him but that he could not recall seeing any of the clerks in the store after he entered. Approaching the opening in the aisle from the direction of the meat counter he passed along a cake display rack and the proof is that the two boxes placed across the aisle as a barricade would not have been visible to him until he passed around the end of the cake rack and was within a step or two of the boxes. It appears that the boxes were placed within one or two feet of the edge of the opening.

Because of plaintiff’s inability to remember events immediately preceding the fall, it does not appear whether he saw the crates and stepped over them, failing to recognize that they were placed there as a warning, or stumbled over them and fell into the opening. It should be stated, however, that neither of these boxes were found in the basement and it is argued in behalf of plaintiff that if he had stumbled into the boxes, being of light weight, they would have been *284 pushed in the direction of the opening and would have been found in the basement after plaintiff fell. From this it is argued that the boxes were either not placed in front of the hole as insisted by defendant or that sufficient room remained for plaintiff to walk around them and into the opening.

In behalf of defendant it is insisted that the barricades, consisting of the two boxes mentioned, were sufficient to give notice of the danger to all persons using the store in full possession of all their faculties and exercising ordinary care for their own safety; that plaintiff was guilty of barring contributory negligence in walking into a place of danger without looking and that, in any event, plaintiff was a mere licensee to whom it owed only the duty of abstaining from willful negligence.

Clearly, the opening left by the removal of the trap door in the middle of an aisle frequented by the general public, whether as invitees or licensees, constituted a peril the probable consequences of which should have been foreseen by one exercising ordinary care and caution and, we think, whether the two boxes referred to constituted such a barricade or warning- as an ordinarily prudent and cautious person would have provided under the same circumstances to give warning of the danger was a question to be determined by the jury- ■

Defendant owed the duty of providing a barricade strong enough to withstand the force of a person moving around in the store and who might, without negligence on his part, while engaged in shopping or other business of a distracting nature, come in contact with, or press against such barricade. Rosenbaum v. Shoffner, 98 Tenn., 624, 632, 633, 40 S. W., 1086; 45 C. J., sec. 296, pp. 871, 872.

We think the jury well warranted in concluding that two small boxes of the type already described placed on a smooth floor and easily pushed about were wholly insufficient to meet the ordinary exigencies of prevailing conditions. Persons visiting a store of the type operated by the defendant G-odsey have a right to assume that the premises are free of such dangers and are not guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look for such pitfalls or even for barricades marking off such places and, if it be assumed that plaintiff saw these boxes or that he failed to see them when he shotrld have seen them if in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, it does not necessarily follow that their presence on the store floor would have apprised him of the danger. The boxes were of a type commonly found in grocery stores and sometimes left on the store floor after the removal of their contents. Though it does not appear, plaintiff may have seen the boxes and have stepped over or around them without being conscious of any danger.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 984, 23 Tenn. App. 280, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-tennessee-light-power-co-v-gose-tennctapp-1939.