Hayden v. Colville Valley National Bank

39 P.2d 376, 180 Wash. 220, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 827
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1934
DocketNo. 25315. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 376 (Hayden v. Colville Valley National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Colville Valley National Bank, 39 P.2d 376, 180 Wash. 220, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 827 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

This action was brought for damages for permanent injuries to appellant, a spinster, which *221 she alleged were caused by the negligence of respondent in the maintenance of a single step in the main hallway on the second floor of its bank building in Colville. The case was tried to the court and a jury, which, after hearing conflicting evidence, resolved the evidence in favor of appellant and awarded her twenty-five hundred dollars. This • verdict was later set aside by the court, and judgment entered for respondent, notwithstanding the verdict, dismissing the action upon the ground that appellant’s own evidence showed that she was guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law, and that the step upon which she had fallen was not inherently dangerous or defective. At the same time, an alternative motion for a new trial was denied.

A memorandum decision was filed by the trial judge, which may be summarized as follows: (1) There was nothing inherently dangerous about the step in question; it was not defective or improperly constructed; and (2) appellant had been over the step twelve or fifteen times before, had passed over it thirty or forty seconds before she fell, knew-the step was there, failed to use ordinary care and caution, and walked off the step without paying any attention to where she was going, and, as a result, fell and was injured; and is, therefore, guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

The sole assignment of error is in granting the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and dismissing the action.

The trial judge seemed to consider that certain answers made by appellant to interrogatories when her deposition was taken, while she was in a hospital, should be construed most strongly against her. That is incorrect. In passing upon a motion for a judgment notwithstanding' the verdict, all statements *222 favorable to the contention of plaintiff must be taken as true, and the trial conrt must consider all inferences most favorable to plaintiff and most strongly against defendant. Fisher v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co., 148 Wash. 122, 268 Pac. 180; Bryant v. Hartford Eastern Railway Co., 158 Wash. 389, 290 Pac. 874.

The court can find one guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law, only when the standard of duty is fixed and the measure of duty defined by law, and is the same under all circumstances; or where the facts are undisputed and but one reasonable inference can be drawn from them; and if different results can not honestly be reached by different minds. McQuillan v. Seattle, 10 Wash. 464, 38 Pac. 1119, 45 Am. St. 799; Bell v. Northwest Cities Gas Co., 164 Wash. 450, 2 P. (2d) 644.

Although there was conflicting evidence, the evidence on behalf of appellant showed substantially these facts: About 1908, the building now owned by respondent was constructed. At that time, it consisted of the banking room on the street floor and several offices on the second floor to which access was had by a flight of stairs consisting of twenty-seven steps located in the rear of the banking room and at the back of the building. At that time, a single hallway step, from which appellant fell, was constructed. Originally, a window was evidently contemplated at the top stair landing, which would have furnished direct light upon this step. The following year an annex of the same height was built at the rear of the original building. The stairway constructed to serve the original building was also used to give access to the annex. The hallway to the annex was connected with the original stairway landing.

The step in question is a single step, six and one-half inches in height. To one in the hallway approach *223 ing’ this step, which extends across the hallway to the west- of the stair landing, and looking* east into the annex hallway, the entire hall of about seventy feet in length had the appearance of one level floor in both buildings. This unusual step Was deceptive in appearance. It was not readily discernible. There was nothing to attract one’s attention to it, and unless one had a present knowledge of the step, or was actually looking at it, it was dangerous.

Witnesses testified that it was not standard construction ; that there were no signs or warnings about the step, such as an arrow, a marker on the floor, a return railing, or an artificial light, when the accident occurred, although there was a light situated directly over the landing, which the evidence showed was turned on at times during the day, but that the hallway was in darkness when appellant fell on this step. The only natural light which could reach the step had to come from a skylight about eleven feet west, which was dark and dim, and a window about thirteen feet east, which, from their locations, threw no direct light upon this obscure step. The step was situated in a shadow, and on and prior to August 30, 1933, the date of the injury to appellant, the walls and floors were dark and dingy. Others had stumbled or fallen on this step prior to that day, and a director of the bank had notice of that fact and had commented, upon it.

On August 30, 1933, appellant, then seventy-three years of age, was in Colville on business matters. She desired to consult with her attorneys, whose office was in the bank building, about an important legal matter. The door of their office was about seven feet west of the step in question. As she ascended the main stairway, she paid no particular attention to any step or steps, but walked up in the normal and usual way, with all steps raised before her eyes, with her mind cen *224 tered upon and entirely occupied by her business. In going up, all steps, in effect, were one stairway. In returning, there was this step in the hallway and a separate stairway descending at a right angle. She had not been in the bank building for at least a year, although she had been on that floor of the building from twelve to fifteen times before, and had no particular recollection or impression of this hallway step upon which she later fell.

She reached the door of her attorneys’ office and found it locked, which unexpected fact distracted her. Also, at that time painters were engaged in renovating the hallway in question, although they had not then redecorated and lightened' the walls, floor and surroundings, about this step. There was confusion in the building on that floor, and she became confused and distracted. She hesitated there in the hallway for a short time, debating whether to go down stairs and come back later or remain there until her attorneys returned. After a minute or two, or possibly more, she decided to go down and return later.

She started from the door of her attorneys’ office and approached the stairs, at which time her attention was diverted by a man at the end of the hallway in front of her and by a door opening into a room there. It was very dark in the hallway, and she did not see the step. She did not know it was there, and there was nothing to warn her of its presence. Her mind was on her business and the distraction in the hallway. The light at the stair landing was turned off.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 376, 180 Wash. 220, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-colville-valley-national-bank-wash-1934.