Geoghegan v. Fox Co., Inc.

132 A. 408, 104 Conn. 129
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 132 A. 408 (Geoghegan v. Fox Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geoghegan v. Fox Co., Inc., 132 A. 408, 104 Conn. 129 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Keeler, J.

The appellant contends that the nature of a department store is such that owing to certain risks consequent upon its character, equipment and management, its owner is charged with a higher standard of care in his conduct of the same than in the pursuance of ordinary business operations, and that in law he is charged with the same responsibility toward persons entering his establishment, invited thereto for the transaction of business, as are carriers and inn-keepers, that is, that a standard of care differing in kind as well as in degree obtains in such a case. In support of this claim he cites Wolf v. Sulik, 93 Conn. 431, 106 Atl. 443, in which it is held that by the exigencies of the condu'ct of present day business affairs, the doctrine of respondeat superior has been so extended as to bind any one who prefers to manage his affairs through others, “to so manage them that third persons are not injured by any breach of legal duty on the part of such others while they are engaged upon his business and within the scope of their authority.” Many cases from other jurisdictions are cited to the same effect. But it at once appears that all of them are concerned with a logical and necessary extension of the doctrine of vicarious liability, beyond that which obtained in former times and under simpler industrial and commercial conditions. This is not to place any given business or undertaking into a class by itself, establishing a differing or higher standard of care. Liability is one thing, the standard of care is another. They are confused in the claim of the plaintiff. We have been asked to adopt the doc *134 trine of a higher and different standard of care in cases relating to the conduct of places of public amusement, and have refused. In such cases we have uniformly held that the place where the business is conducted, its structure and equipment, must be kept in a reasonably safe condition, and that those who resort thereto should be protected, and that those who are concerned with the operations involved in the conduct of the concern and its management should exhibit due care. Due care in such a case is care proportioned to the nature of the instrumentalities involved and the circumstances ordinarily attendant. Due care may in any given case mean great care; the care is always to be proportionate to attendant requirements and hazard. Turgeon v. Connecticut Co., 84 Conn. 538, 80 Atl. 714; Glynn v. Lyceum Theatre Co., 87 Conn. 237, 87 Atl. 796; Bernier v. Woodstock Agricultural Soc., 88 Conn. 558, 92 Atl. 160; Godfrey v. Connecticut Co., 98 Conn. 63, 118 Atl. 446; Firszt v. Capitol Park Realty Co., 98 Conn. 627, 120 Atl. 300.

In the instant case, the plaintiff was an invitee. In Sweeney v. Old Colony & Newport R. Co., 92 Mass. (10 Allen) 368, 373, a leading case largely followed and frequently cited, the rule is laid down “that an owner or occupant is bound to keep his premises in a safe . . . condition for those who come upon and pass over them, using due care, if he has held out any invitation, allurement and inducement, either express or implied, by which they have been led to enter thereon” and to make use thereof in accordance with the intention and design with which the place was adapted and prepared to be used. The opinion states the duty to be to keep the premises in a safe condition; in a reasonably safe condition is the rule of duty we require toward the invitee. A department' store is clearly a place to which the public is invited and *135 induced to enter and its allurements are manifest and striking. In Pomponio v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 66 Conn. 528, 538, 34 Atl. 491, we adopted this rule, and said that the invitor must not, “by his own active negligence,” injure the invitee while the latter is upon invitor’s property. The use of the phrase “active negligence” has unfortunately not always accorded with clarity of reasoning, in that it has been used as if thereby a new degree of negligence had been recognized and thus the rule of Lord Holt, not recognized in this State, had been adopted. We have explained the true meaning of this phrase in Dickerson v. Connecticut Co., 98 Conn. 87, 92, 118 Atl. 518, as denoting some positive act of a defendant, or some failure in a duty of operation which is the equivalent of a positive act; and in the opinion (p. 91) it is further stated that the use of the phrase does not adopt “for the owner a rule of liability based upon a standard other than the failure to exercise due care.”

In the case before us, then, the defendant was bound to exercise reasonable care to have the place wherein it transacted business safely constructed, and to exercise due care in its operation, an operation conditioned by any possibilities or dangers peculiar to its use. As we have before stated, this care in operation may at any given time, or in any given situation, imply a high degree of care. The amount and degree of care, then, to be exercised by the defendant’s saleswoman for whose negligence, in the scope of her employment and also in any act furthering the business of her employer, the latter was responsible, is a question of fact to be determined by the trier. No claim is made that the arrangement of counters and of tables in the aisle between the same was a dangerous one, and openings at intervals in a long counter extending the length of a large store are usual, and it might be *136 said necessary for the convenient dispatch of business. The store was brightly lighted. We are therefore con-' cerned with the conduct only of the plaintiff and defendant, having regard to the physical arrangements above noted.

The trial court has found that plaintiff has failed to prove the negligence of the saleswoman. To come out from behind the portion of the counter of which she was in charge and go for a time elsewhere, was undoubtedly a frequent, necessary and ordinary course of conduct. Such movements would ordinarily be made in the scope of her employment and in furtherance of the interest of her employer. We may fairly infer, in the absence of anything in the finding to the contrary, that her movement just preceding the collision was of this character. She of course knew that in the passing to and fro of employees and customers of the store, with the aisles sometimes crowded, more or less contact of one person with another, ranging from slight shoving to collisions of some violence, were not infrequent, and in most cases a matter of course and not productive of harm, but with the possibility of serious harm. The court has found that she might have seen the plaintiff so far as any obstacle to sight was concerned, and might have avoided a collision had she seen him. The question of her negligence involves the care she should have exhibited in observing the condition of the aisle as she emerged therein.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 408, 104 Conn. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geoghegan-v-fox-co-inc-conn-1926.