Foley v. Hornung

169 P. 705, 35 Cal. App. 304, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 338
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1744.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 169 P. 705 (Foley v. Hornung) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foley v. Hornung, 169 P. 705, 35 Cal. App. 304, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 338 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Plaintiffs are husband and wife, and the action is by plaintiff, Mary Foley, for injuries received by her through the alleged negligence of the defendant. It appears from the complaint that the defendant is a merchant conducting business in the city of Bakersfield in a building situated on Chester Avenue. It is alleged that the place of defendant’s business consisted of a building, on the ground floor of which his general merchandise business was conducted, and to which access was had at the entrance on Chester Avenue. That there was a basement to the building about nine feet below the ground floor. That toward the rear of said ground floor there was a large hole or opening in which was an elevator used for the purpose of conveying goods to and from the basement to the ground floor, and was “so located that anyone entering said store for the purpose of making a purchase therein would be liable to fall into said hole or opening unless the same was properly provided with guards or the said opening was closed,” and that the said hole was dangerous to persons trading in or walking in or about said store. That on June 3, 1912, the plaintiff, Mary Foley, entered said defendant’s store for the purpose of purchasing a tent and was met by "defendant, “who directed her to the rear end of said store to look at some tents which defendants were offering for sale.” That while plaintiff was passing to the rear of said store for the purpose mentioned, and having no knowledge that there was an opening or trap in said floor, she stepped into and fell through said hole to the basement, thus receiving the injury complained of; that the said opening was by reason of the negligence of defendant wholly unprotected or closed.

*306 The complaint then set forth the nature of the injuries received, alleging that they “were not caused by reason of the negligence of the said plaintiff, Mary Foley.”

A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled and defendant answered, denying specifically the averments of the complaint except as to the general description of the building and the location of the opening mentioned' in the complaint. Alleged “that the hole mentioned and described in said complaint was carefully guarded by a rope firmly suspended a distance of two and a half feet above the floor of the storeroom, and about four feet distant from the edge of the opening mentioned in the said complaint, in a manner so that the same was plainly'visible to the sight of any person proceeding toward the said opening, and that the same formed an effectual obstruction against a person attempting to proceed toward said hole or opening; and the said plaintiff entirely disregarded the said guard or rope and deliberately walked under or over the same, and, through her own carelessness and negligence, caused herself to be precipitated into the basement of the said building.” That defendant’s store mentioned in the complaint was divided into two departments, “the fore part of which was arranged for the reception of customers of said defendant and of displaying and dispensing merchandise to them, and the rear portion of the said store at said time was used by the said defendant for a workshop, in the manufacture and repair of harness and other leather goods, and .also for storing merchandise of the said defendant in a loft suspended over said shop.” That the said opening mentioned in the complaint “was situated in the rear of said store and in that portion thereof so used by the said defendant as a workshop.” That on said date defendant proceeded to the rear portion of the store for the purpose of procuring a tent to show to plaintiff “in the front portion of the said store, and before departing to procure the said tent enjoined the said plaintiff to remain in the front portion of the said storeroom until the said defendant should return with the said tent, ’ ’ and that plaintiff disregarded the instructions of the defendant and “deliberately walked over or under the said rope and was proceeding toward that portion of the said storeroom used as a workshop by said defendant, when she precipitated herself into the said opening, and sustained the injuries alleged in *307 her complaint. ’ ’ Alleged that at the said time the said storeroom and that portion where the said opening was situated was well lighted “and the said rope and opening were plainly visible to any person proceeding toward the same, and had the said plaintiff exercised ordinary care and caution, she would have avoided falling into the said opening and sustaining the injury alleged in her complaint.”

The cause was tried by the court With a jury and plaintiffs had the verdict for damages in the sum of two thousand dollars, on which judgment was accordingly entered. Defendant appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. A reversal of the judgment and the order is asked on the grounds: (1) The insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; (2) Errors of the court in admission of testimony and comment, of the court upon such testimony; (3) The error of the court in refusing and giving instructions; (4) Misconduct of the jury in reaching their verdict by resort to chance.

The account of the accident appears by the testimony of plaintiff, Mary Foley, found in the record in narrative form. We quote as follows:

‘ On the. 3d of June, 1912, I lived in Bealeville, Kern County. I came to Bakersfield the 3d of June to get a tent. I asked a gentleman where I could get a tent, and he says, ‘Go over there, that store there; they have tents there."’ I went over there and he was standing at the door where I could see him before I went in, and the gentleman came out and says, ‘What do you want 1 ’ I says: ‘Do you sell tents here 1 ’ and he says, ‘Yes, come in,’ and I went right in. I went right after him, and I went in part way, and he went that, way [pointing], and I went this way. I followed him up and he went that way [pointing], and I went in the hole. I couldn’t say how far I was behind him when following him. Both of us was walking; he was walking and I was walking after him. The distance between us maybe two or three steps. I couldn’t say. He walked in and I walked right after him. He went that way and I followed him. He turned that way, where the buggies were, the right hand. I couldn’t tell you anything about what part of the store it was that he turned, only he turned that way, and the hole was right here, and the counter was right here, and when he *308 went that way where the buggies was— The Court: What part of the store were you in when he turned ? A. Just even with the counter, and he turned and it happened so quick— it happened so quick that I couldn’t do any more. The hole was in the middle of the floor, quite a ways back in the building, near the counter. It was back near the end of the counter. It’s quite a long store. I was about three,or four feet from the counter when this man turned to the right. After he turned to the right I fell in the hole right there. The counter was on the left side of the building coming in. I couldn’t tell where I fell,' but it was a hole. That was all I know about it. It was a big dark place I fell in. I.fell down and went to the bottom, wherever it was, about ten or twelve feet, as far as I know. . . . There was no rope or guard or railing of any kind around this opening that I could see when I fell into it, and after I fell in it.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 705, 35 Cal. App. 304, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-hornung-calctapp-1917.