Jane G. West and Ralph E. West v. Ruth Shizuko Tan, Individually and Doing Business as Banyan Inn

322 F.2d 924
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1963
Docket18240
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 924 (Jane G. West and Ralph E. West v. Ruth Shizuko Tan, Individually and Doing Business as Banyan Inn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane G. West and Ralph E. West v. Ruth Shizuko Tan, Individually and Doing Business as Banyan Inn, 322 F.2d 924 (9th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

DUNIWAY, Circuit Judge.

This is a diversity case to which the laws of Hawaii are applicable. The appellants, plaintiffs in the trial court, obtained a verdict for the appellant wife for damages resulting from an accident in which she was injured, and a verdict for the appellant husband for certain expenses incurred by him. The verdict for the husband depends upon the correctness of the decision for the wife. The trial judge granted a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and the only question before us is whether this was error.

The facts that are material to the appeal are basically undisputed. We state them most favorably to appellant, but omit matters not directly pertinent to the issue to be decided. The appellants were vacationing in Hawaii, and on the night in question, accompanied by friends, they visited a restaurant known as the Banyan Inn, situated in the town of Lahaina on the Island of Maui, and owned and operated by appellee. The dining room area is covered, and is adjacent to an uncovered dance floor. The appellants were seated with friends at a table near the edge of the dance floor. Across this dance, floor and about 30 feet away was a bandstand, enclosed on the back and sides by walls and covered by a ceiling. The floor or platform of the stand was about 12 inches above the dance floor. Both the dance floor and the floor of the bandstand were made of concrete of the same color, described as “dark.” The face of the step from the dance floor to the bandstand was of a lighter color, plainly visible to anyone approaching the bandstand, although the immediate area in which the stand was located was not lighted. The dining area was lighted, but not brightly. The bandstand was dark, but there was light enough coming from the dining area to see an upright piano, situated toward the rear of the stand. The front of the stand was partially fenced off by ssome sort of lattice, but with space in the center through which access to the stand could be obtained from the dance floor. The physical layout, as shown by the description of the premises given by the witnesses, and by the photographs in evidence, would make it apparent to anyone in the dining area that the bandstand was not intended for the regular use of patrons of the restaurant.

The appellant wife loved to play the piano and had been told at her hotel that there was a piano at the Banyan Inn. She brought along some sheet music and after the party was seated she asked a friend to inquire of the waitress if it would be all right if she went up and played the piano, and she herself also inquired. The reply was: “Certainly, that would be wonderful,” or words to that effect. The two appellants then pro- *926 needed to the bandstand. The wife testi.fied that as she approached it she could .see the step, that it was very clear to her, and that she stepped up without difficulty, but that “it was really dark there where the piano was.” The appellant husband -obtained a folding chair from a stack of ■chairs that was on the bandstand and the wife then sat on the chair at the piano. There was light enough that she •could see the piano and place her sheet music on it, see the chairs, and see to .sit down, but not enough to permit her ■to read her music. Her husband searched for a light which he could use to illuminate her sheet music, and in the meantime she played for a few minutes from memory. Her husband found a small lamp giving very little illumination, which he used to light her sheet music. Her playing lasted about ten minutes. During this time, appellee and her husband heard the music and appellee saw her on the stand at the piano. Neither ■of them did anything to stop her.

When appellants were told that dinner was being served, the wife got up to leave the bandstand. Her testimony is that she knew that the step was there, that she .knew about how many steps it would take to go from the piano to the step, that she looked to see if she could find the edge of the step, that because it was ■dai’k she could not see it, particularly since the floor color was the same, so that in the dim illumination “it looked like ■one floor, just had the appearance of one floor running, melding into each other. I finally found the edge of the step and put my left foot down, and as the foot was going down, it wasn’t reaching the bottom, and I sort of — when I wasn’t reaching the bottom, it gave me a little— ■■set me off balance and I turned over on my ankle and then threw out my elbow to save my fall.” Her testimony is con■fused and contradictory as to what she ■meant when she said that she found the ■edge of the step. It is not clear whether ■she found it with her foot before stepping down or found it by stepping down. She could not see how high the step was, but she remembered that it was a high step. She did not ask anyone for a light or ask anyone to assist her. She suffered fairly serious injuries.

Two of the grounds upon which the court granted the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict were that the appellant wife was a mere licensee as to the band platform, and that she assumed whatever risk there was, if any. We agree with the trial court. In most cases, questions as to whether a person is a “mere” licensee, or an invitee ox-business guest, and as to whether the risk was assumed, are fact questions, to be decided by the jury under proper instructions. But, as in other cases, there are times when the evidence is so clear that the court must rule as a matter of law; this is such a case.

We are cited to no statutes or decisions of the Supreme Court of Hawaii that are in point. We assume that that court, if confronted with the question, would apply principles of general law as to the liability of the appellee in these circumstances. We are of the opinion that on these undisputed facts the appellant wife was at the most a “gratuitous licensee” as defined in Restatement of Torts, § 331, or a “licensee,” or “mere” or “bare” or “naked” licensee, as defined by Professor Prosser (Prosser, Torts, 2d ed., 1955, ch. 15, § 77, p. 445). As Professor Prosser says, “such a person is not a trespasser, since he is permitted to enter, but he comes for his own purposes rather than for any purpose or interest of the landholder. He has only the consent to distinguish him from a trespasser, and for this reason he is sometimes unfiatteringly referred to as a ‘bare’ or a ‘naked’ licensee. He receives the use of the premises as a gift, and comes under the old saying that you may not look a gift horse in the mouth. He has no right to demand that the land be made safe for his reception, and he must, in general, assume the risk of the condition he may encounter, and look out for himself. The permission to enter carries with it no obligation to inspect the premises to discover dangers which are unknown to the *927 possessor, nor, a fortiori, to give warning or protection against conditions which are known or should be obvious to the licensee.”

Of course, when appellants entered the defendant’s restaurant, and while they were in the area designed and made available for the use of patrons, they were not then gratuitous licensees. They were what is commonly known as invitees, or business invitees or business visitors. (See Restatement, Torts, § 332) However, as Prosser points out (op. cit., § 78, p.

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Bluebook (online)
322 F.2d 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-g-west-and-ralph-e-west-v-ruth-shizuko-tan-individually-and-doing-ca9-1963.