Fidelity-Phenix Ins. v. Lynch

455 S.W.2d 79, 248 Ark. 923, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1316
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 8, 1970
Docket5-5280
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 455 S.W.2d 79 (Fidelity-Phenix Ins. v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity-Phenix Ins. v. Lynch, 455 S.W.2d 79, 248 Ark. 923, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1316 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

Lyle Brown, Justice.

Appellee Paula Lynch was the plaintiff below and recovered judgment as the result of a fall down the stairway in St. Anthony’s Hospital in Morrilton. The judgment was against Fidelity-Phenix Insurance Company, which covered the charitable hospital with public liability insurance. Fidelity-Phenix moved, for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief on the ground that while the proof showed the landing at the top of the stairway was not built according to regulations, that construction was not shown to have been a proximate cause of Mrs. Lynch’s fall. The motion, which was overruled, was renewed without success at the close of Fidelity-Phenix’s case. The propriety of those rulings is the only question on appeal.

Evidence introduced by appellee reflected that Mr. and Mrs. Lynch visited a sick friend on the second floor; that they left the hospital by the same route they entered, using a flight of stairs; and that appellee fell down the stairs after passing through a door which opened onto the stairs. As the couple started down the steps they were headed south, and the door was hinged to their right. Naturally the door had to be by them pushed forward and out over the stairs. There was no landing on the stairs side, or south side, of the door. As one stepped through the door, instead of stepping on a landing the same level as the- floor on the north side of the -door, he stepped down to the first step of the stairway. The riser of the first step was flush with the door opening. The described construction was in violation of state health department regulations which required the floor level of the corridor of the second floor to be maintained on the stairway side of the door for a descending distance equal to the width of the door.

Alton Lynch described his wife’s fall in these words:

And as I put my hand up on the door to push it open, I had my hand probably above the flash plate — or buffer plate — the push plate on the inside of the door, which would be the north side of the door. I pushed the door open, I would say at least 45 degrees. * * * Whether or not my wife had her hands on the door, I cannot say for certain, but the door was in the —open, and by her being ahead of me, I was at a standstill holding the door. She stepped —I believe she stepped with her left foot. She went down; and with one continuous movement as she stepped. * * *
Q. She started to take the step and started falling head long down the steps?
A. It was just in outer space. I didn’t have time. Of course, I-had one of-my hands on the door. I don’t know for sure which hand I had holding the door open, but she stepped, and she was gone; and I didn’t have an opportunity to grab. She was just there- in outer space, you might say, and went down the steps and -hit just once half way to the bottom, half way down those steps, and seemed like the next time she hit it was at the bottom of the steps, the landing.

Appellee’s description of the fall on direct examination was very brief. She testified that as they ascended the stairs to the second floor she did not observe the absence of a platform; that she had never before used this particular passageway; that she pushed the door and started to step and “I just fell”; that she started with her left foot but made no contact; that “I just fell and I landed at the bottom of the steps”; and that she had no recollection of catching her heel or slipping on any object.

On cross-examination appellee was questioned at length about her precise movements immediately preceding the fall:

Q. Did you place your left foot on the first step down?
A. I started to — if I — I fell, just like I started to step and fell in a hole.
Q. Mrs. Lynch, did you place your foot on the first step down?
A. I couldn’t tell you if it depended on my life.
Q. Did you tell me on August 25 in Mr. Gordon’s office, before a court reporter, . under oath, that you did step with your left foot on the first step down?
A. Yes. I said that.
* * *
Q. Were you confused at all about that?
A. Yes, I’m confused until this day what caused me to fall.
* * *
Q. I said, ‘And you could see a step down? And you put your left foot down one step, is that correct?’ And your answer was, ‘Yes.’ Now, is that your testimony?
A. If it’s down there, I said it. But something happened to that first step when I stepped down. I don’t — I mentioned I didn’t know whether it was a narrow step or what, but something happened with that first step.’
* * *
Q. My question is: Having seen the top step, did you take your left foot, as you said here [discovery], in answer to several questions, did you take your left foot and place it down on that top step and fall?
A. Well, I took a step with my left foot, and I fell, I don’t know what happened. I don’t know whether I hit the step, or the middle of the step, or where I hit it. I just don’t know.

Appllant emphasizes the difference in appellee’s statements made on discovery and in her courtroom testimony. The essential difference is apparent. On discovery she testified that she placed her left foot on the first step down and fell, the cause 'of the fall being unknown to her. At the trial she stated on cross-examination that she did not know whether her foot ever made contact with the first step. The discrepancy was a factor for the jury’s consideration in passing on appellee’s credibility and in its search for the truth. It creates no ground for our disturbing the verdict. Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Saunders, 193 Ark. 1080, 104 S. W. 2d 1062 (1937).

Appellant contends that there is no established connection between the absence of a landing at the head of the stairs and the fall experienced by appellee. It is emphasized that appellee did not know what caused her to fall and hence the conclusion of the jury on that score must rest solely on guesswork.

A safety engineer testified as to the regulatory requirements concerning a landing on the stairway side of the door and level with the corridor on the other side. He described the safety feature of the requirement:

On the stairways, you never know, if you’ve a door that you can’t see through, what’s on the other side. When you go through a door the purpose of the landing is to give you room to go out of the door, handle the door, close it. You have room to look at the environment. It is a protection to get you beyond the door.

When one examines the testimony of appellee’s husband in the light most favorable to the jury conclusion, we think its finding of causation was reasonable. The jury could well have found from that testimony that appellee stepped into open space.

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Bluebook (online)
455 S.W.2d 79, 248 Ark. 923, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-phenix-ins-v-lynch-ark-1970.