Helfer v. Glaze

252 P. 1078, 81 Cal. App. 40, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 800
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3177.
StatusPublished

This text of 252 P. 1078 (Helfer v. Glaze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helfer v. Glaze, 252 P. 1078, 81 Cal. App. 40, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 800 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This action was tried before a jury resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $6,000. Prom the judgment entered thereon the defendant appeals.

The complaint alleges that on or about the fourteenth day of July, 1923, the defendant owned, maintained and controlled the Merritt-Jones Hotel in the city of Santa Monica, that the defendant, by his agents and employees, kept and maintained over a large window fronting on Marine Avenue, a public street in said city, a large awning for the purpose of shading said window; that the frame of said awning was maintained in such a careless and negligent manner that it became loosened and on or about the fourteenth day of July, 1923, while so negligently and carelessly maintained, fell without warning and struck the plaintiff upon her head; that the plaintiff, without any negligence or carelessness on her part, was walking along the sidewalk adjoining said street and over which said awning was so carelessly and negligently maintained by the plaintiff, and that, while so walking along said sidewalk, the frame of said awning, in its fall, struck her upon the head; that the suddenness and force of the blow of the iron frame of said awning felled her to the ground, rendering her unconscious. The plaintiff further alleges that by reason of said injury plaintiff was rendered sick and sore throughout her whole body, suffering concussion of the brain and traumatic neurosis (a nervous trouble in this case arising from a wound upon the head). *42 The complaint then proceeds to allege certain special damages, such as loss of compensation for her services and that she had been unable to engage in her usual employment for a long period of time, that she had incurred certain expenses for medical attendance, medicines and also certain expenses for the attendance of nurses.

The defendant denied: 1. The alleged careless and negligent manner of maintaining the awning in question, denied that it fell upon the plaintiff, and, as a special defense, alleged that the premises in question were under lease to other parties.

Upon this appeal, the defendant presents for our consideration four questions: 1. The insufficiency of the evidence to warrant a finding that plaintiff was injured by the falling awning; 2. That the evidence is insufficient to warrant a finding of negligence; 3. That the court erred in not instructing the jury that' the premises were leased; and 4. That the damages awarded are excessive.

In support of the first assignment the appellant lays the premises of. his argument upon the statement that the awning which fell, and by the falling of which the plaintiff alleges she was injured, was maintained over the northerly, instead of over the southerly one of two large windows in the front of said hotel building, and was so far away as not to be within the range of vision of two witnesses seated near by in a bootblack-stand in the recess adjoining the front of said hotel building adjoining the sidewalk along which the plaintiff was walking. An examination of the exhibits and of the testimony in this case shows that the appellant is in error in laying down the premises for his argument. The awning that fell is shown beyond any reasonable contradiction to have been the one maintained over the southerly window of the front of said hotel and within a very few feet of the bootblack-stand, readily visible to anyone seated thereon while having his shoes shined. There is some doubt left in the testimony as to whether the southerly or the northerly end of the irons which fell came nearest to the ground. This difference in the testimony of the several witnesses, however, is utterly immaterial, because whether it was the iron supporting the southerly end or the northerly end of the awning which came closest to the sidewalk, if either struck the plaintiff upon the head, as alleged by *43 her, the witnesses seated in the bootblack-stand, as stated by them, had a sufficiently clear vision to see what was taking place, if by any means their attention was called thereto. The awning was stretched on canvas with the roller at the top upon which the canvas was rolled up when the awning was raised and having an iron tube or iron around the lower portion thereof to give the canvas extension out over and far enough from the window to give shade and protection from the summer sun. Some of the witnesses described this iron rod or pipe as being three-fourths inch in diameter. There seems to be no question raised as to the fact that the iron pipe used in the lower portion of the awning to give extension thereof was of sufficient weight to strike a very severe blow in the event of its fall.

The witnesses L. B. Farman and J. J. Hartman testified as to seeing the awning in its fall strike the head of the plaintiff. Hartman’s testimony is, in substance, as follows: “I know where the Merritt-Jones Hotel is situated, I know the cigar-stand next door to it, I have friends in that neighborhood. During the past six years I have been frequently in the neighborhood of the hotel; I know the location of the shoe-shining stand. It is next door to the hotel; I worked at the hotel when it was being built, have known the owners and operators of the hotel from time to time; the picture shown me is a fair representation of the front portions of the Merritt-Jones Hotel on Marion Avenue; the large window is in front of the cafe; I was sitting on the shoe-shining stand somewhere between three and four o’clock on the afternoon of July 14, 1923, first chair from the street; I could see all the front part of the awning, I was looking up toward the Pacific Electric car; I saw the plaintiff, Miss Heifer, on that day, I saw her and another woman coming down the street, just as they got at that corner, the awning fell on them; I saw the awning just as it struck the woman’s head; there was no man with Miss Heifer; no one pulled the awning down, there was no one near the awning except those two women.”

The witness Farman testified that he saw the awning frame strike the plaintiff on the top of the head; that after the injury he saw the awning frame torn loose from the building; that no one pulled the awning down; that the plaintiff was in the position of a passer-by on the street.

*44 This witness testified that he was looking at the two women when they walked along the sidewalk, that when they came in front of the Merritt-Jones Hotel, he saw the awning fall and hit the plaintiff on the head, that it was the awning frame that hit the plaintiff. The witness then identified the window from which the awning fell, that the plaintiff was looking down toward the beach at the time she was struck by the falling awning. In view of this testimony, It seems unnecessary to consider further appellant’s argument that there is no testimony to support the finding by the jury that the plaintiff was struck by the falling awning.

Upon the question of the awning being maintained in a negligent manner, the witness D. B. Young, called by the defendant as an awning expert, on cross-examination, testified that when the awning is maintained in a normal manner or condition, it would not come down below a distance of eight feet from the sidewalk; that it would not be possible to come down to within about four feet of the sidewalk, if maintained in a normal condition; that it cannot come down to within four feet of the ground if in good condition.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rocca v. Tuolumne County Electric Power & Light Co.
245 P. 468 (California Court of Appeal, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 1078, 81 Cal. App. 40, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helfer-v-glaze-calctapp-1927.