Foard v. Rath

33 Pa. Super. 182, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 5, 1907
DocketAppeal, No. 127
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 Pa. Super. 182 (Foard v. Rath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foard v. Rath, 33 Pa. Super. 182, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264 (Pa. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This is an action of trespass based on the alleged negligence of -the defendant. At the close of the evidence counsel for defendant asked the court to charge that, “ Under all the evidence in the case, your verdict should be for the defendant.” This point was refused and an exception granted for defendant and a bill sealed. The single assignment of error is in substance that the court erred in refusing said point.

[184]*184The two controlling questions thus raised are, (a) the negligence of the defendant, and (b) the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.

To present this case fairly it seems necessary to make a somewhat lengthy statement of the facts. On January 18, 1905, the plaintiff, a man aged seventy-four years, drove,'with a teamster, to defendant’s place of business, fronting south on Laurel street in Philadelphia. Defendant’s place consisted of two adjoining buildings. The eastern one was used by him as a factory, and access thereto is by large double doors, described as a gateway by a witness, which opened practically the whole front of the first floor. The western building was used by defendant as an office, access being had thereto through a door from the street, about four feet west of the large double doors above mentioned. About eight feet from the front walls of the buildings, cutting off a portion of the office, was a shaft for a hand lift or dumb waiter used by defendant to lower and raise articles to and from the cellar. Access to this lift was through a door from the office, which, when not in use, was kept closed and fastened on the office side. On January 16, 1905, the defendant’s son, Burton, was set at work making an opening in the brick wall, directly opposite the door in the office leading to the lift, so the lift could be used, also, from the eastern building. On the 18th, when the plaintiff came to the factory and was hurt, this opening was substantially made but not finished, as Burton was trimming the rough brick and smoothing the opening on the sides and overhead. At this time this hole was about five feet three inches high, and a little less than three feet wide. There was a passageway leading from the back part of the factory building into the rear of the office. On the latter date the plaintiff entered the defendant’s office, by the regular way from the street, to deliver some tin cans which he had sold to the defendant, and, after making known his business, plaintiff went out of the same door through which he had entered, to attend to delivering the cans. This was not the first time the plaintiff had gone in and out of the office by the regular entry from the street. When the plaintiff came out, his teamster had backed the wagon up to the curb near the large doors of the factory. At this time, Charles Rath, a son of the defendant, came out and assisted the driver in put[185]*185ting the cans inside of the factory. While this was being done, plaintiff walked into the factory where the cans were being placed (this being the room where the hole in the brick wall was being made). This hole was about eight or ten feet from the wide front entrance.

The manner of the plaintiff going into and the time of his remaining in the factory room is important, because he had really no business in that room; he was not invited there, and the evidence shows that defendant objected to persons being therein, because he was manufacturing polish by a secret method and the plaintiff probably knew that visitors were not allowed in that room. While the cans were being unloaded, the plaintiff and his teamster say that he asked the defendant to change a five dollar bill, so that he might pay his driver. The defendant took the money, and, as plaintiff testifies, entered the hole in the wall and disappeared. Soon thereafter, one of the defendant’s sons went through the hole and another one soon came out of it and at once went back therein. About thirty seconds after defendant took the money, plaintiff walked into the hole, fell down the shaft and was hurt.

Plaintiff contends that he was induced to walk into the hole 'in the wall by seeing defendant and two of his sons go that way, as he supposed, to the office. But he explicitly testifies that no one invited or told him to go that way to the office. He also contends, contrary to all of the other witnesses, that this hole was very dark; and he further says that he (did not see anjr open- door in the opposite side of the shaft.

The positive and uncontradicted testimony is that the door on the office side of the shaft was closed and bolted. The positive testimony of the defendant, two of his sons and two other witnesses is that the defendant and his sons did not go through the hole at all, and that the plaintiff never saw anybody go through that hole into the office. The testimony of all of the witnesses, but the plaintiff and his driver, is that the factory room was, on that afternoon about 3:30 o’clock, perfectly light on account of the large doors opening the whole south end of the building; that the opening in the wall was in plain sight of any person in the factory room. But the jury must have found against, as it seems to us, the strong weight of the evidence, that the room was dark at the hole in the wall [186]*186and. that the plaintiff saw the defendant and his sons passing through that hole and that he then walked into it and was in j ured. In our opinion, it makes little difference which horn of the dilemma the plaintiff accepts. If it was dark, how could he see parties going through that opening, and how can he justify walking into a dark hole in the side of a building, for the purpose of going into an office, where a few minutes before he h^.d entered and come out by a perfectly safe way, and this way was only four feet from the large doors of the room in which he stood, and those doors were wide open at the time. His own evidence is clear that he did not see the defendant and his sons go through the hole into the office; he only saw them disappear therein and come out of it. In our opinion, there was nothing in this to invite or justify him in walking into this, as he says, dark hole in the wall. If it was light he could readily see it was unsafe and not an entrance to the office. If it was dark, he was guilty of gross negligence in stepping into it without feeling or examining to ascertain if there was a bottom to it, or a passageway leading to the office. The width of the shaft, from the brick wall to the door on the office side, was twenty-two inches. The door on the office side of the shaft was closed and, therefore, when the plaintiff was in the opening in the brick wall, his face was not over two feet from this door. He could not possibly see any open way to the office. If it was dark, he ought to have reached out in front, and if he had done so his hand would easily have reached the door. If he had stood in the brick opening and felt with his foot for the floor in front of him, he would have found nothing there to step on.

The defendant’s point should have been affirmed on the ground of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. If there had been a hole in the floor of a dark room where the plaintiff had a right or license to be and he walked into it accidentally, a very different question would have been presented. He did not walk into the hole in the wall accidentally, but purposely and recklessly.

Upon the other question, we do not think the defendant was proved guilty of negligence.

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131 A. 668 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Pa. Super. 182, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foard-v-rath-pasuperct-1907.