Harral v. Kent Corp.

212 P.2d 356, 168 Kan. 322, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1949
DocketNo. 37,720
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 212 P.2d 356 (Harral v. Kent Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harral v. Kent Corp., 212 P.2d 356, 168 Kan. 322, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 482 (kan 1949).

Opinion

[323]*323The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by a guest of a hotel, owned and operated by defendant corporation, when she attempted to leave the hotel by a rear door after dark and fell into a ditch outside such door.

The jury answered special questions and returned a general verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $3,500. Defendant’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, to set aside answers to special questions, and for a new trial, being overruled, it appeals.

For a number of years prior to June 28, 1947, the defendant owned and operated the Kent hotel in Norton. It had four outside doorways — one was the main entrance into the lobby, a second was into the coffee shop, a third opened onto the back yard from the kitchen and was for the use of kitchen employees, the fourth, being the one in question, also opened onto the back yard of the hotel and was for the use of hotel employees in carrying laundry from the rooms to the laundry room at the back of the hotel. It will be referred to as the “back door.”

Shortly after June 1, 1947, construction work, consisting of replacement of steam, pipes, was begun at the rear of the hotel premises and was not yet completed on the date of plaintiff’s injuries. A ditch approximately four feet wide and six feet deep, running north from this back door, was dug so as to expose the steam pipes. There were mounds of dirt paralleling the ditch and other obstructions in the back yard.

Plaintiff, a woman fifty-four years of age, testified that in June, 1947, she was living in.Nebraska, but came to Norton on either the 26th or 27th and obtained a room on the ground floor of the hotel. She had stopped there on several previous occasions, was familiar with its ground floor layout and various entrances, had used this back door herself on those previous visits and had seen other people, guests as well as employees, use it; that on Saturday night, June 28, about 9:30, she decided to leave the hotel for a cup of coffee, but not considering herself properly dressed to go out through the lobby or coffee shop entrances, where she would have to pass “a lot of people,” started down the hall to go out the back door and to a nearby restaurant.

“Q. Go ahead, Mrs. Harral. A. And went out down the hall, the out[324]*324side door, I mean the wooden door, the main door, was open. The screen door was closed. I just walked to the door, opened it, and stepped out— stepped down rather, into this hole or ditch. Terrible sensation, went down through there.
“Q. Now, did you take over one step until you was into that hole? A. No, I didn’t take any step at all. I .opened the door and stepped right down into this ditch. This ditch, I don’t know whether it run up underneath the building or not, but it was up flush with the door, that I know.
“Q. Do you recall as you fell whether you struck anything on the way down? A. I did. I went all the way down. My feet slipped, I went on down further. These pipes, sewage pipes, water pipes, I went on it and went down through those. It was quite some time before I could get out of there. I don’t know whether I hollered or not, that I couldn’t say, because I was too scared. I had to — I tried to get out, I could just reach the bottom part of the door, I could slip my fingers underneath the bottom of that door, pulled it open, and I pulled on that, got up to those pipes with my knee and body in a little ledge on the bank. I pulled myself up into the hall, then from there on I crawled down to my door, waited a few minutes, I called Mr. Yockers at the desk and he came back.
“Q. Was a doctor called there afterwards? A. Yes, Dr. Cooper was called.”
“Q. I believe you stated you do not recall how long you were down in there, in that hole? A. I really don’t know how long I was down in there.
“Q. It has been indicated here before the jury in the opening statement that was made by the defendant’s counsel that you unwired a door to get out there. Was that door, that screen door wired shut, fastened in any way? A. It wasn’t fastened in any way, because I just walked to the door, put my hand on the door, pushed it open and walked out.
“Q. Was there any resistance to your push on that door at all? A. No, not at all.”

She further testified that no one had ever told her not to use this back door, that there were no warning signs, no lights or anything indicating danger; that the ditch was open and uncovered and that before the ditch was dug one went out this door on a cement walk to the sidewalk just a few feet from the main street. That after she had crawled back to her room, Mr. Yockers, the manager, came in and said, “How in the World did you do it?” and “My God, I will have to fasten that -door before somebody else gets hurt.”

On cross-examination she testified that she had been in and out of the hotel several times on the day in question but had used the lobby door; that her last previous visit to the hotel was a month or six weeks prior to this time; that she had seen various people use this back door on this particular visit and that she had gone out of the door at night on previous visits.

[325]*325One Deweese, who had been a bellhop at the hotel for about two years, testified concerning the ditch, that he used this door about twice a day; that he could step from the door over to a ledge oi cement; that on June 28 he used it once and that at no time did he ever recall the door being wired or nailed shut.

Another witness, a maid on the lower floor, testified that she had occasion to use this door both before and after the ditch was dug and including June 28; that she had never seen the door wired shut and that she had had no difficulty in being able to step across or get around the ditch. That- she had seen people other than employees using the door in going to and from the hotel to the street not far from it.

Another witness, a schoolteacher in Norton, testified that she visited the plaintiff the night after the accident and at that time the screen door was hooked and wired shut by use of nails and small wire.

In addition to the foregoing plaintiff also introduced considerable evidence concerning her injuries, and which will be referred to later.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence defendant demurred “for the reason that the plaintiff had not proved facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover from the defendant; that the plaintiff had failed to prove culpable negligence on the part of the defendant; and that her evidence proved contributory negligence on her part.”

The demurrer was overruled.

Yockers, the manager of the hotel during the month of June, 1947, resided in Denver at the time of trial and his testimony was taken by deposition. He testified to the general floor plan of the hotel, that this back door was not usually used by guests in entering and leaving the hotel; that it would have been much simpler and a shorter route to go outside had plaintiff used the lobby entrance, and that during the construction work he had instructed his employees not to use the back door.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 P.2d 356, 168 Kan. 322, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harral-v-kent-corp-kan-1949.