Feinberg v. the Strose-Adler Co.

3 Conn. Super. Ct. 202, 3 Conn. Supp. 202, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 171
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1935
DocketFile #47640
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Conn. Super. Ct. 202 (Feinberg v. the Strose-Adler Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feinberg v. the Strose-Adler Co., 3 Conn. Super. Ct. 202, 3 Conn. Supp. 202, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 171 (Colo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

Plaintiff, in his complaint, alleges that his finger was injured while on and in the act of leaving defendant’s premises where he was as an invitee.

His injuries were sustained, he avers, because in making his exit it was necessary for him to open a heavy gate, in the process of doing which his finger was caught between an iron plate on the wall of a building toward which the gate swings and against which it rests after being opened, and the edge of the gate.

An important question—and it is believed, a decisive one— has to do with the contention that plaintiff was an invitee.

Defendant owns and occupies premises consisting of large buildings used for the manufacture of wire, corsets and boxes, which premises front on Court Street and on Olive Street in New Haven. On the Olive Street side are two driveways, the one nearest Court Street being known as the north and being the one made use of by plaintiff at the time he was injured.

South of this and about 200 feet from it, is the entrance to the office of the defendant from which access may be had to the several departments of manufacture located in the buildings which comprise the plant.

*204 South of the offices is another driveway.

Both of these driveways are used for receiving material delivered to defendants plant, and one south of the main or office entrance more especially for pulp board. That on the north is covered by the upper part of a factory building and leads to an open space surrounded by plant buildings of which that on the westerly side has a loading platform for the use of vehicles delivering or receiving merchandise for the defendant and for a casket company.

The building forming the west boundary of the open enclosure to which this driveway leads forms one side of a rectangle to which the driveway leads. Its first floor is occu' pied and used by a casket company, its basement and second floor by the defendant, on the latter of which at the end of the building nearest Olive Street is the office of the foreman of the' box department.

The driveway is paved with heavy Belgian blocks and is used by both the casket company and the defendants for the purpose only of giving access to the loading platform which is located 200 feet from Olive Street for the use of trucks and other vehicles engaged in delivering or taking away raw materials or finished merchandise.

Access to‘ the office of the foreman of the box department is gained through and from the main office by passing north on the second floor in that portion of the building which faces on Olive Street and connects at a right angle with that part used for the box department which fronts on Olive Street and lays along Court Street.

It appears that on January 9th, 193?, the plaintiff was desirous of having some sample boxes made for a shirt manufacturing concern of which he was general manager and that after telephoning to the man temporarily in immediate charge of defendant’s box department in the absence of its superin' tendent,, was told by this party “to come over” to explain more definitely what type of box he wanted; that plaintiff asked the party with whom he talked where he could locate the latter in the plant and was told by him “to come right into the box factory”; that plaintiff had never been to defend' ant’s factory before and did not know where the box depart' ment was and on being driven to the Olive Street portion of the plant, on coming to the north driveway inquired of *205 a person coming out of the latter, “where is the box factory” and in response to what he was told the car in which he was riding was driven through the north driveway into the open area and there parked; that, after making further inquiry of a man working on the loading platform, plaintiff made his way through the interior of the building occupied by the casket company on the first floor and by defendant in the basement and second floor, to the point where the foreman’s office was located; that having transacted his business plaintiff followed the same course he had taken in entering the building in returning to the car; that thereupon the car in which plaintiff had seated himself, in leaving the premises drove out the driveway through which it had entered, but on coming to the gate, found it closed; that plaintiff asked a boy to have the gate opened, but upon being told by him that he could, himself, open it he did so and in so doing was injured.

The premises may be adopted that ordinarily any person entering defendant’s premises for the purpose of transacting business with any of its officers or agents, whether as a result of an express or implied request would be an invitee and that as to such a person the defendant would be under the legal duty to exercise reasonable care to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition. Stratton vs. Newbury Co., 117 Conn. 522.

This duty, of course, applies to approaches and means of egress. Petrillo vs. Kolbay, 116 Conn. 389.

It is co-extensive with the invitation and relates not only to those portions of the premises to which a person is invited but, also, to those to which by implication the invitation applies. Bunnell vs. Waterbury Hospital, 103 Conn. 520, 525; Meyer vs. Saint Augustine’s Church, 109 Conn. 410, 413.

It follows, necessarily, that the legal duty owing by an in vítor to an invitee does not extend to portions of the premises which the latter is not impliedly invited to use from the fact that he has been invited to enter other portions of such premises. Rooney vs. Woolworth, et al, 74 Conn. 720, 721; Keeran vs. Spurgeon Mercantile Company, 194 Iowa, 1240, 191 N.W. 99, 27 A.L.R. 579, 583; Scanlon vs. United Stores Co. 228 Mass. 481, 117 N.E. 840, 841, 45 C.J. pp. 831, 832, #240; 40 R.C.L. 66, 67.

*206 There was no express invitation or direction to the plaintiff to make use of the driveway or means of entrance which he chose to do. The invitation was to come direct to the box department, which it is found, meant to come to the box department to see the party with whom plaintiff had talked over the ’phone, instead of first interviewing others higher in authority or rank.

That direction did not, of course, contain any invitation to plaintiff as concerns the means of entrance to the box department which he was to make use of. Plaintiff had provided such a means through its main office which was but two hundred feet away from the driveway in question.

The driveway was not intended by defendant to be used as a means of entrance, nor as,an approach to the use of the area to which it led as a parking space for cars, by those having business with it, nor was it used for any purpose except the delivery of materials to. and the carrying of goods from the loading platform at the rear.

Insofar as it made access to the box department possible this was by means of a circuitous and inconvenient route.

It cannot be found that plaintiff was an invitee, express or implied in entering the driveway or using it as a means of exit. The situation is obviously distinguishable from that described in Werebychick vs. Morris Land & Development Co., et al, 108 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Conn. Super. Ct. 202, 3 Conn. Supp. 202, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feinberg-v-the-strose-adler-co-connsuperct-1935.