Hugo v. Manning

441 P.2d 145, 201 Kan. 391, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 27, 1968
Docket44,988
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 441 P.2d 145 (Hugo v. Manning) 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
Hugo v. Manning, 441 P.2d 145, 201 Kan. 391, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 380 (kan 1968).

Opinion

*392 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hatcher, C.:

This controversy is the result of a personal injury received in a stampede from a fire in a crowded building.

The defendant, Robert Manning, was the court appointed receiver of an amusement park in Provence Village, including buildings, numerous rides and other amusement equipment. He managed and maintained the properties and had full control thereof. The defendant obtained permission to sell the amusement equipment and other personal property at public sale. The building chosen for the sale was approximately 24 feet wide and 100 feet long. There were two doors on the east side at the north and south end. The doors were 2 feet 4 inches wide. There was a double door on the west side of the building which was nailed shut.

At the time the amusement equipment and other personal property was brought into the building for auction, there were already various other items and materials in the room, which were not for sale, including boat building equipment, some boats, molds, jigs mounted on wooden frames with wheels on them, a number of containers and a heavy paper sack or burlap bag with something in it or under it.

The boat building equipment, boat materials and containers were present in the room when defendant first entered two years before and remained in the building until the time of the sale in approximately the same position they were in the first time defendant saw them. He didn’t know what was in the containers and he made no effort to find out. The amusement equipment and other personal property which appellee assembled in the building for the sale occupied about two-thirds of the room from the front toward the back and the boats and other materials and containers went the rest of the way to the north end.

The placing of the contents of the building was described by a witness:

. . Equipment to be sold and the rest of the contents were piled or stacked in a state of disarray. Equipment was piled all over each side and in the middle, and jumbled up. During the sale there was no space for moving around. People had to climb on top of things to get to where the auctioneer was. One had to turn sideways to walk through the room. People climbed from one machine to another. The aisles were inadequate.”

Those in attendance at the sale, some 100 to 200 in number, were *393 permitted to go to the north end and browse around, look at things and pick them up. People were “all over the place before the sale.” There was a path from the south to the north end of the room.

The auctioneer started selling at the south end of the room and was moving toward the north along the west side. He had been selling about a half to three-quarters of an hour when a noise was heard coming from the north end of the room by those attending the auction. It was varyingly reported as sounding like a flat board falling against the floor, making a popping sound, a noise similar to that made by a match in a barrel of gasoline—a “whoom” sound; a sound like a “whoosh,” and a noise like a firecracker going off. A gray smoke rose to the ceiling, turned black and flames broke out.

The stampede after the fire commenced was described by a witness as follows:

“Hell, they started jumping on one another’s back and, of course, most of the people went in the front at this time, see. Which is the south edge. Boy, I mean, they really panicked. I never seen anything like that. I have been in fires; but never like that, the way they panicked so bad. I actually saw one guy that went out a window. I mean, the window was boarded. Had a couple of two by fours, you know. And he went clear out the window. I mean, and the rest of them, they were just pushing and shoving and hollering at one another, like, you, know, walking in a chicken coop as the wolf—I mean, they just—boy, they were really getting wild. I started to go to the front (southeast) but there were a number of people trying to get out the front door. One man jumped out a window.”

Plaintiff attended tbe sale witb ber husband, daughter and son-in-law. After a candy floss machine was auctioned off, she and her husband started to leave the building when suddenly she heard screaming and noise in the back of the room. She turned to see what it was and saw smoke and then flames. Then everybody started shoving and pushing. When she got to the door, somebody gave her a shove and she landed on the ground outside the southeast door. She was lying on her back and couldn’t get up because her right arm was hurting so badly. Her husband got out the door and stood on the edge of the slab where she was lying, holding out his hands so people would stop stepping on her.

The plaintiff filed an action against the defendant in which she alleged negligence causing the injury in (1) failing to furnish plaintiff a safe place in which to accept his invitation as a business invitee, (2) inviting and permitting an unduly large crowd to gather in the building with inflammable substances in close proximity to the crowd, (3) inviting a large crowd into the building without *394 adequate doors or outlets and (4) maintaining in the building quantities of highly inflammable and dangerous substances, their exact nature not being known, but was known to defendant or should have been known to him that a large crowd was liable to cause it to ignite. These were allegations of specific negligence.

The petition then pled res ipsa loquitur in a separate paragraph as follows:

“That said explosion and fire were due to one or more acts of negligence on the part of the defendant, the exact nature of which act or acts are not known to die plaintiff for the reason that the materials, substances, ingredients, instrumentalities and equipment situated in said aforementioned building, as well as the building itself, were at all times herein mentioned under the exclusive and sole supervision and control and management of the defendant, but that said explosion and fire would not have occurred if the defendant had employed proper care in the storing, handling, inspection, supervision and control of said substances, materials, ingredients, instrumentalities and equipment, the supervision, management, control and handling of which were his responsibility. That said negligence on the part of the defendant was the direct and proximate cause of the injuries sustained by plaintiff.”

The answer consisted largely of a general denial.

The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was overruled and plaintiff has appealed.

The appellant first contends that the trial court committed error in refusing to permit her to submit her case both on the theory of res ipsa loquitur and specific acts of negligence insofar as she relied on negligent cause of the fire as one of the proximate causes of her injuries.

The matter arose at the close of appellant’s evidence. Following the overruling of a motion for a directed verdict the appellee suggested striking the cause based on res ipsa loquitur.

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Bluebook (online)
441 P.2d 145, 201 Kan. 391, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hugo-v-manning-kan-1968.