Givens v. Spalding Cloak Co.

63 S.W.2d 819, 228 Mo. App. 169, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 107
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 11, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 819 (Givens v. Spalding Cloak Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Givens v. Spalding Cloak Co., 63 S.W.2d 819, 228 Mo. App. 169, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 107 (Mo. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TRIABLE, J.

Plaintiff's action is to recover damages for alleged burns to ber scalp charged to have been negligently inflicted by defendants in giving plaintiff a hair-dressing, known .among the ladies as a “permanent wave,” or, as it is frequently called, a “permanent.” She sued for $7500 and recovered a verdict and judgment for $3000 against Spalding Cloak Company, but the jury found in favor of defendant Brisboise.

The Spalding Cloak Company duly appealed; the plaintiff took the initial steps for an appeal against defendant Brisboise, but failed to perfect same; so the case now stands on the Cloak Company's appeal.

The petition alleged:

“That Spalding Cloak Company is a corporation engaged at all times herein mentioned in operating a large store in Kansas City, Missouri, and that at the timés herein mentioned there was operated and maintained in said store a department and establishment known as Spalding Beauty Salon, where beauty treatments, and beauty treatment having to do with the condition and care of the human hair, were given to the public generally for fees and compensation collected by defendants therefor;.
“That defendant-Pearl Griffith (now Brisboise) was at said times *171 tbe manager and in general charge of said Spalding Beauty Salon and was financially interested therein, as herein set forth;
“That defendant Spalding Cloak Company advertised said Spald-ing Beauty Salon in the newspapers and otherwise,' advising the general public of same as a department in said store so operated by said company, and said defendant Spalding Cloak Company and defendant Pearl Griffith (now Brisboise) jointly operated said Spalding Beauty Salon in some form of partnership between them whereby the profits thereof were divided between them and they held out to the public said beauty salon as a department of said store and represented to the public, on which plaintiff relied, that said salon and said business and the operators thereof were competent to Undertake heat treatment and other treatments of the human hair, and that relying thereon, plaintiff, about January, 1929, went into said store and became a customer of defendants in said Spalding Beauty Salon, and defendants and their agents thereupon, for money compensation paid defendants by plaintiff, attempted to treat and give some form of heat treatment to the scalp and hair of plaintiff, and in so doing burned the head, scalp and hair of' this plaintiff and partially cooked same, causing her great physical pain and mental anguish heretofore and in the future, causing large bald places on her Scalp, and permanently destroying and damaging large portions of her hair.
‘ ‘ That said result was extremely .unusual and out of the ordinary and that said treatment and instrumentalities were exclusively under the control of defendants, and she is unable to more specifically describe the negligent conduct of defendants, but she alleges same resulted from /the negligence of defendants, and that thereby she' has been damaged in the sum of $7,500, for which amount she prays judgment against defendants with costs.”'

The Spalding' Gloak Company, admitting it was a corporation, filed a general denial as did also the defendant, Brisboise.

The record' discloses the following with reference to the facts leading up to, and surrounding the administration of the treatment and the infliction of the alleged burns:

The actual work of giving the hair treatment and permanent waS done by Jean Kernanen, a young woman employee (of whom will appear -later). The defendant, Mrs. Pearl Griffith Brisboise was the “manager” of the beauty parlor in which the permanent was given, but she did not come into the parlor until after the hair-dressing and permanent had been given, and the plaintiff customer was ready to depart.

The treatment and permanent were given in the forenoon of January 14, 1929. Plaintiff testified that she had known the operator, Miss Kernanen, for some time before that, “it might have been five or six years.” Plaintiff was forty-three years old and,had been a resident of Kansas City for twenty-five years. She had obtained else *172 where other hair-treatments, including two permanents, from Miss Kernanen prior to this, and, knowing or "having her residence telephone number, made an appointment with her, over her said residence ’phone, for the 14th of January, 1929, at the Spalding Store “to give me ai permanent in the morning.” Plaintiff went to the Spalding Cloak Company’s store early in the morning of the 14th to get the permanent:' She had5 never been to the store before, though, as heretofore stated, she knew Miss Kernanen, having formerly met her in two' other beauty parlors and' had received two permanents from her before'. Upon entering the Spalding Cloak Company’s store, plaintiff did not know where the beauty parlor therein was located.- So- she asked what she calls' a “floor-walker, or a clerk or some employee therein, where the beauty parlor’was?” He told her and gave her a printed card, on which was printed the following:

“VITA TONIC PERMANENT WANES $10.00' or, in clubs of two or moré $8.50
SPALDING BEAUTY SALON on Mezzanine Floor Pearl Griffith, Manager
1010 Main Street Phone Main 5221
Barber in Attendance
‘Our Special Service
Shampoo and Marcel
Bobbed Hair $1.00 and $1.25
We Invite You to Take Advantage of Your Charge Account.’ ”

The beauty parlor was on the balcony or mezzanine floor in the store, one short flight- upstairs, and an inquiry as to whether it was separated from the rest of the'store did not disclose any responsive or illuminating answer, other than: “I would say it was separated because I have no elevator service.”

Plaintiff found the young woman Jean KernaUen in the beauty parlor and told her she “wanted a permanent, a nice deep wave.”

At this point in her testimony, she w,as asked:

“Q. And did they proceed to do that? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You may just describe to the jury in your own way how they started about that and what they did. A. Well, of course, she first shampooed my hair and got it ready to wrap and she wrapped it in the usual way and put it under this machine with the pads and everything on it to give me the permanent and this was- the third permanent that Jean had given me, and she always gave me a nice deep wave.
“Q. On the other occasions before when you have had the same kind of a service had it burned you or hurt you in any ivay ? A. No; this is the first time that I had ever had that.
“Q. Now, on this occasion just explain what it was that she put *173 on your bead, I mean any bind of apparatus or machinery of any sort. A. It looked like just any other permanent'machine.
“Q. Sort of describe it to us. -We do not know about those things. A.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 819, 228 Mo. App. 169, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/givens-v-spalding-cloak-co-moctapp-1933.