Hatfield v. Levy Brothers

117 P.2d 841, 18 Cal. 2d 798, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 425
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1941
DocketS. F. 16620
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 117 P.2d 841 (Hatfield v. Levy Brothers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatfield v. Levy Brothers, 117 P.2d 841, 18 Cal. 2d 798, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 425 (Cal. 1941).

Opinion

CARTER, J.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, commenced this action against defendants for damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff, Pearl Hatfield, from a fall in defendants’ mercantile store, alleged to have been caused by the negligent maintenance of the floor. Defendants denied that they were negligent and pleaded the defense of contributory negligence. A jury trial was had resulting in a verdict for plaintiffs of $10,000, and defendants appeal from the judgment entered thereon. All four defendants made a motion for a new trial. The motion was denied as to all except defendant Maebel Morris; as to her it was granted' on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence one day after all of the defendants had perfected their appeal from the judgment.

Plaintiffs allege and defendants did not deny that all of the defendants owned, controlled and maintained the mercantile store in San Mateo, in which the accident occurred, although it appears from the evidence that defendants Bromfield, Morris and Scott were employees of defendant Levy Brothers, a corporation.

Inasmuch as one of defendants’ contentions on this appeal is that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, we will first direct our attention to the facts. On March 15, 1939, between 4:30 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon, plaintiff Pearl Hatfield, who was six or seven months pregnant, *803 was a customer in said store; she was therefore on the premises as an invitee. She had visited the dry goods department of the store to exchange an article of merchandise. She then left that department, went to another part of the store, and purchased refreshment at a soda fountain counter. She left that counter to cross that part of the store and pay for her purchase at the cashier’s desk. While so walking across, and after taking four or five steps, she slipped and fell; as stated in her language: “Why, I slipped on some wax on the floor, and ... I really fell.” The fall occurred when she put her right foot down for a forward step, her right foot skidding forward and left foot backward. As a result of the fall she sustained severe and serious injuries. At the point where she fell there was a skid mark from her shoe. The floor of the store is a hardwood floor with boards of varying width and running lengthwise. Where the boards join laterally there are “V” shaped grooves about 3/16 inches wide at the top and 9/16 inches deep. There is an incline of 4% inches change in 28 feet back from the street entrance door. The floor, where the accident occurred, had been waxed by defendant Scott, an employee of Levy Brothers, the morning of the day of the accident with an electrically powered waxing machine which melted the wax, spread it, and polished the floor, all in one operation; it was manually propelled over the surface. The operator of the machine had control of the amount of wax deposited on the floor, and if an excessive quantity were deposited thereon the machine would spread rather than remove it; an excessive amount of wax would make the floor slippery. The evidence shows that a waxed floor is ordinarily not slippery unless an excess quantity of wax is applied which does not occur unless the one applying the wax is “very careless.” Defendants’ witness Adams testified on direct examination: “Q. As far as causing a slippery surface, Mr. Adams, is a wax applied hot like this with a cornuba base and a machine that revolves as fast as this machine does, would it leave a slippery surface? A. No, it does not ordinarily. Ordinarily the cause of slipperiness is what they call 1 piled up,’ too much wax on the surface in the application of the machine, but unless the operator is very careless it is almost impossible to get it piled up, and get too much and be slippery.” The floor was “extremely slippery” as evidenced by the testimony of one of plaintiff’s witnesses who *804 slipped and nearly fell on the day of the accident. That witness, Mrs. Robe, testified that she arrived at the store some time between 10 o’clock in the morning and noon the day of the accident and slipped after taking a few steps from the street entrance into the food and restaurant department of the store which was near the place where plaintiff, Pearl Hatfield, thereafter fell, and that the floor was being waxed when she was there. Defendant Scott testified that he commenced waxing the floor at 8:00 a. m. and started at the street entrance door where Mrs. Robe entered; that it usually took about 1% hours to do the waxing. It may be inferred therefore that he had waxed the portion of the floor where Mrs. Robe slipped near the entrance door as she did not arrive until after 10 a. m. and the waxing was commenced by Scott at 8 a. m. at the entrance door. There were spots on Mrs. Hatfield’s top coat which she was wearing at the time of the fall which “had some floor marks that looked like wax, a greasy substance.” Defendant Scott who applied the wax admitted that the floor was slippery where the wax had been applied that morning. He testified: “Q. No. Just answer my question now. There isn’t any question at all after you got through waxing the floor that morning, that wherever you applied wax and polished it with the buffer, it was slippery, wasn’t it? A. Yes.” He testified to the contrary in other portions of his testimony, but that would do nothing more than create a conflict in the evidence which has been resolved against defendants by the jury. Defendant Bromfield, the president and manager of defendant, Levy Brothers, testified at the taking of his deposition prior to trial (it was read at the trial) that he issued orders after the accident “that the floor not be waxed,” and that other people had slipped on the floor prior to the accident. He qualified that by a correction of his deposition to the effect that a number of women had fallen in both of defendants’ stores from time to time with the floor both waxed and not waxed.

On the score of sufficiency of the evidence establishing defendants’ negligence we cannot say as a matter of law that plaintiffs failed to prove that issue. The facts as herein-above recited manifestly established sufficient facts to require submission of the issue of negligence to the jury. Defendants produced evidence to the effect that there was no excess wax on the floor; that the floor was not slippery; that *805 the best quality of wax was used; that the wax application machine was efficient and of a kind commonly used; that the floors were of a kind commonly used and that waxing is a common and customary treatment for hardwood floors. This evidence merely creates a conflict. The duty of resolving that conflict rested with the jury, and it is beyond the power of this court to disturb a verdict based upon conflicting evidence. The jury may well have inferred from the evidence establishing the facts above recited that the floor would not ordinarily be slippery from waxing unless an excess quantity of wax was applied, which does not occur unless the operator is “very careless”; that such fact taken with the facts that the wax was applied just prior to the accident, that the amount of wax applied was controlled by the one operating the application machine, that the floor was very slippery after the application, that plaintiff, Pearl Hatfield, did slip and fall, and that there was wax on her coat, would amply justify the inference that there was negligence in applying an excess quantity of wax which was the proximate cause of the injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P.2d 841, 18 Cal. 2d 798, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatfield-v-levy-brothers-cal-1941.