Giron v. Bailey

985 A.2d 1003, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 4891912
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 18, 2009
Docket2008-179-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 985 A.2d 1003 (Giron v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giron v. Bailey, 985 A.2d 1003, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 4891912 (R.I. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY,

for the Court.

Jane Bailey, the owner of residential rental property, appeals from Superior Court judgments in favor of her tenants, Cayetano and Robin Giron. The Girons’ claim against Bailey emanates from Caye-tano’s 1 fall from a second-floor porch to the street after the porch railing collapsed. The parties appeared for oral argument on November 3, 2009, pursuant to an order of this Court ordering them to show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided without further briefing or argument. After considering the record, the memoranda submitted by the parties, and the oral arguments advanced by each, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown and that the case should be decided at this time. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgments of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

In the evening hours of September 30, 1999, Robin answered a telephone call for *1005 her daughter Jill, and gave the telephone to Cayetano to locate Jill. Cayetano called out for Jill to answer the phone, but she did not respond. Cayetano then walked onto porch to see if Jill was either on the porch or in the street below. After taking four steps, Cayetano’s foot sank into the soft-wooden floorboards. He tripped, lost his balance, and fell forward toward the right porch railing. He had the telephone in one hand, and he reached out for the porch railing with his free hand in an attempt to break his fall. Unfortunately, the porch railing broke free from the columns to which it had been attached, and Cayetano plunged from the second floor onto the sidewalk below; the railing crashed to the ground with him.

Over a year before this incident, in August 1998, Cayetano and Robin Giron moved into the second-floor apartment at 221 Union Avenue in Providence. The building was owned by Jane Bailey and managed by her son, Marshall Bailey. 2 Jane never visited the property and Marshall acted at all times as if he was the landlord of the building. A contractor, Marshall performed repairs to the building and also collected the rents from the tenants.

Immediately after moving into the apartment, Robin Giron notified Marshall about the poor condition of the second-floor porch. She described the wooden porch as “a little lopped,” and although she sat on the porch occasionally, she never went near the front railings, preferring to sit just to the right of the porch door. She said that Marshall told her that he planned to construct a new second-floor porch, but no new porch ever was built. Charles Norris, the third-floor tenant, frequently used the porch, and he agreed that some parts of the wooden floor were rotted and in need of repair. Cayetano never went on the porch prior to the day of his fall.

The second-floor porch raffing was composed of four wooden columns and three separate metal railings that spanned the width of the front of the house. Each railing section was affixed to two wooden columns with screws at the top and bottom of each side of the railing. The four wooden columns extended from the ceiling to the floor.

On September 29, 1999, Robin had a couch delivered to her apartment. The couch was lifted from the street and hoisted over the second-floor porch railing. During that process, it came into contact with the middle section of the railing. As a result, both screws affixing one side of the middle railing to the columns became detached, causing the railing to hang precariously, rather than in its normal upright position.

Robin called Marshall later that day and told him that the middle railing had been damaged. Marshall came to the house that night. Marshall testified that from the street he observed that the right railing, the same raffing that Cayetano later would fall through, and not the middle railing struck by the couch, “looked loose,” but that it remained attached to the columns. When Marshall took another look at the right raffing from the second floor, he thought that the railing looked bent, not loose. He said that he told Robin to stay off the porch and also said that he locked the porch door with a deadbolt. He conceded, however, that he did not put up any warning tape and that the deadbolt could *1006 be unlocked from the inside without using a key. 3

Robin testified that Marshall looked at the middle railing from the second-floor window, but she never saw Marshall go out onto the porch to inspect the railing; she did indicate she may have heard him go onto the porch. According to Robin, Marshall said that he would fix the railing, but he took no action before Cayetano was injured. She also denied that Marshall instructed her to stay off the porch.

The day after Cayetano’s misfortune, Robin telephoned Marshall to report the fall. Robin also took photographs of the missing right porch railing, the previously damaged middle porch railing, and the porch floorboards. Later that day, Marshall came to the house and nailed the porch door shut. At that time, he also told Robin and Charles Norris to stay off the porch. At a later point in time, Marshall replaced all the metal porch railings with railings made of wood.

On September 27, 2002, Cayetano and Robin Giron filed a complaint in Superior Court against Jane and Marshall Bailey. 4 The Girons alleged that on September 30, 1999, the Baileys “negligently and recklessly failed to exercise proper due care to maintain the common areas” and that Cay-etano Giron tumbled from the second-floor porch and suffered injury “due to defective railings and dangerous conditions maintained by the Baileys.” Robin Giron claimed that she had suffered a loss of consortium as a result of Cayetano’s injuries.

The trial began on February 18, 2008. Robin, Jane, Robin’s daughter Jill Jones, Marshall, and Cayetano all were called to testify during plaintiffs’ case. Although he did not appear personally, portions of Charles Norris’s deposition transcript were read into the record. The Girons also introduced photographs of the second-floor porch, taken the day after Cayetano’s fall. Jane Bailey offered no witnesses.

Before the trial justice submitted the evidence for the jury’s consideration, Jane moved for a judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. 5 In her motion, she argued that she was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because the Gir-ons had failed “to introduce expert testimony that the railing was unreasonably dangerous or defective or that [Bailey] should have known that the railing was unreasonably dangerous or defective.”

The trial justice denied Jane’s Rule 50 motion, ruling that expert testimony was not required to support a finding of negligence. The trial justice determined that either the accounts of Robin or Charles Norris’s deposition testimony that a couch damaged the middle railing and Marshall was notified about it, or Marshall’s testi *1007

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
985 A.2d 1003, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 4891912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giron-v-bailey-ri-2009.