Hardy v. Southland Corp.

645 A.2d 839, 435 Pa. Super. 237, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1898
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1994
Docket2492
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 645 A.2d 839 (Hardy v. Southland Corp.) 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
Hardy v. Southland Corp., 645 A.2d 839, 435 Pa. Super. 237, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1898 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

BROSKY, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order denying appellant’s motion for removal of non-suit and granting of a new trial. Appellant raises one issue, whether the court erred in granting non-suit on the basis of the assumption of the risk defense. We reverse and remand.

Appellant brought suit to recover damages for an injury sustained at a 7-Eleven store owned by appellees. According to appellant’s testimony she entered appellees’ store on a day it had been raining, stepped onto a floor mat located just inside the doorway and, on her first step off the mat, fell on' the linoleum floor. Appellant admitted that she had glanced *239 at the floor immediately prior to stepping onto it and noticed that it appeared wet. Based upon this admission the trial court concluded that appellant had “assumed the risk” of the injury she sustained and, therefore, was precluded from recovery. The court, based upon this position, granted appellees’ motion for non-suit. Appellant moved the court for the removal of the non-suit and for a new trial, but was denied relief. This appeal followed.

For some time, it appears, there has been a degree of confusion or difficulty surrounding the application of the assumption of the risk doctrine. This has become even more prevalent since the introduction of comparative negligence concepts. Although the exact status of the assumption of the risk doctrine as valid law in Pennsylvania is less than clear, we believe that a proper application of the doctrine does not allow appellee an affirmative defense under the facts presented here. Thus, we will first provide an analysis of the case under the assumption of the risk doctrine.

In Fish v. Gosnell, 316 Pa.Super. 565, 463 A.2d 1042 (1983), Judge Hoffman expounded on the nature of the assumption of the risk doctrine. Judge Hoffman wrote:

assumption of risk as a separate defense has a distinct character. All voluntary risk-taking that can be described by the ambiguous phrase “assuming risk” does not constitute the defense. Rather, all elements of the defense — that the plaintiff “fully understands” the specific risk, “voluntarily chooses” to encounter it, and “under circumstances that manifest a willingness to accept it” — must be “demonstrated] in fact” before the theory will be submitted to the jury.
A particularly difficult element of the defense is in defining “circumstances that manifest a willingness to accept” the risk.... Assumption of the risk “reflects the individualism of the law” which allows people to make their own choices and does not undertake to “protect [them] from the effects of [their] own ... voluntary actions.”

*240 316 Pa.Super. at 577-578, 463 A.2d at 1048-49, (Citations omitted.) According to Fish v. Gosnell, the essence of the defense is not fault “but that the plaintiff changed his position. Before the injury, he intelligently acquiesced in a known danger and abandoned his right to complain, but afterwards, seeks to assert the claim he had waived.” 316 Pa.Super. at 578, 463 A.2d at 1049. Most applicable to the present case was the following analysis:

[preliminary and deliberate conduct done with an awareness of the specific risks inherent in the activity is a proper basis for implying assumption of the risk. Conduct close in time and place to the accident, on the other hand, while it may contain an element of voluntary risk-taking, does not demonstrate a deliberate abandonment of the right to complain, but rather is better judged by its reasonableness, that is, by negligence principles.
[T]he practical difference [between assumption of the risk and contributory negligence] is in the degree of proximity to the particular harm. The preliminary conduct of getting into a dangerous employment or relation is said to be accompanied by assumption of the risk. The act more immediately leading to a specific accident is called negligent.

Id.

When this explanation is considered the decisions on, or implicating, assumption of the risk, appear to have a greater consistency. For instance, when a patron at a baseball game or hockey game complains when struck with a foul ball or a flying puck, a classic example of the type two assumption of the risk, (see Restatement Second of Torts 496A), the patron is deemed to have assumed the risk of that occurrence and is precluded recovery for the patron knows, or is deemed to know, that such a risk is inherent in attending the game. Similarly, when an individual actually participates in a rather inherently dangerous activity with the one who is sought to be held accountable for the sustaining of injury, the doctrine will *241 prevent recovery as was found in Howell v. Clyde, 538 Pa. 151, 620 A.2d 1107 (1993). 1

In contrast, in Fish v. Gosnell, the court found no reason to give an assumption of the risk charge where a plaintiff, while plowing snow with a garden tractor, was struck head-on by the defendant’s automobile. The plaintiff had seen the defendant’s headlights approaching but did not attempt to evade them as he believed that the approaching car was being driven by a practical jokester friend of his. In Handschuh v. Albert Development, 393 Pa.Super. 444, 574 A.2d 693 (1990), we found the denial of an assumption of the risk charge appropriate in a case where a contractor was fatally injured in a ditch collapse. The appellant had argued that the decedent, as a contractor, was aware of the risk of, and consequences of, a ditch collapse and that his failure to completely leave a ditch when a seam in the wall of the ditch developed and a warning was yelled constituted an assumption of the risk of a collapse. We disagreed and concluded the case was appropriately tried under comparative negligence principles.

Considering now the facts of the present case, it appears that the plaintiff entered a 7-Eleven store on a day when it had been raining. When appellant had stepped inside the store she stepped on a small section of carpeting. On her first step off the carpeting and onto the linoleum floor she slipped on the floor and fell. It appears that the linoleum surface was wet and precipitated the fall. The testimony also establishes that just prior to stepping onto the linoleum appellant had glanced at the floor and noticed that it was wet. However, the testimony does not establish that appellant ever interrupted her normal walking gait, noticed the condition of the floor, pondered it for a moment and then proceeded anyway realiz *242 ing that it may be slippery. Indeed, when asked how much time elapsed between the time she glanced at the floor and the time she stepped on it, appellant stated “I had already stepped out. I didn’t notice and stand there and watch the floor. I just proceeded to fall.” R. 53A.

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Bluebook (online)
645 A.2d 839, 435 Pa. Super. 237, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-southland-corp-pasuperct-1994.