Johnson v. Duffy

12 A.2d 277, 64 R.I. 332, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 8, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 12 A.2d 277 (Johnson v. Duffy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Duffy, 12 A.2d 277, 64 R.I. 332, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 44 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

*333 Condon, J.

This action of trespass on the case was consolidated for trial and tried in the superior court with two other similar actions brought by the plaintiff to recover for the same injuries against two other defendants, The Neighborhood Druggist, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the corporation, and Irma Di Leone. The trial justice decided the cases against Duffy and the corporation in favor of the plaintiff, and the case against Irma Di Leone in her favor. Duffy excepted to the decision against him and has brought his exception to this court. Only his case is now before us.

These actions arose out of an accident which happened to the plaintiff on premises owned by Irma Di Leone and occupied by the corporation as a drug store. The plaintiff fell down a stairway leading to the cellar of the premises while he was delivering certain merchandise which had been ordered from his employer by the corporation.

The plaintiff alleged in his declaration that Duffy was the tenant and in control of the premises at the time of the *334 accident, and that it was his duty to keep the stairs in repair so that persons using the premises at his invitation would not be injured while in the exercise of due care. Plaintiff further alleged that Duffy had invited him on the premises on August 3, 1936, and that, while he was there in the exercise of due care, he fell down the stairway leading to the cellar of the premises because of certain defective and broken steps which Duffy had negligently permitted to remain in that condition. Defendant pleaded the general issue to this declaration.

The evidence showed that the corporation was the actual occupant of the premises and that it had been such occupant for many years prior to the date of the accident. The evidence also showed that plaintiff was on the premises on that date delivering merchandise which the corporation had ordered. It also appeared from the evidence that the corporation’s retail drug business was conducted on the premises by its manager, Joseph B. McCarthy, who had been so employed by the corporation from August 1 or 2, 1932, after it bought the assets of the Ferncrest Pharmacy, Inc., which had formerly conducted a drugstore on these premises and which had made a common-law assignment for the benefit of its creditors. For several years prior to August 1932, McCarthy had managed this drugstore for the Ferncrest Pharmacy, Inc., and had personally paid the rent therefor to the owner of the premises.

The evidence further disclosed that on July 15, 1932, before the sale of the assets of Ferncrest Pharmacy, Inc., by its common-law assignee, to Neighborhood Druggist, Inc., John Di Leone, who acted as general agent for his wife, Irma Di Leone, the owner of these premises, gave Duffy an option of lease thereof for one year, with a privilege of renewal for a term of four years. Di Leone testified at one point that a lease for five years was executed to Duffy; he testified at another time that the lease was executed to *335 The Neighborhood Druggist, Inc.; and still later, he testified he did not know to whom the lease was made.

Duffy testified that he could not remember whether there was a lease, but if there was, it would be in the name of the corporation. No lease and no copy of such a lease was produced at the trial. There was some other testimony by McCarthy as toi a lease, but it was not clear at first whether he was referring to a lease or the option for a lease, although later it appeared that it was the latter. He testified positively, however, that he had always paid the rent of the premises, on behalf of the corporation, directly to John Di Leone. And he testified further that Duffy had never given him any money for such purpose but that the corporation’s funds at the store were the source from which he made such payments. The evidence also disclosed that Duffy, personally, did not have any actual control or supervision of the business of the corporation conducted on these premises. Duffy’s participation in the conduct of the corporation’s affairs, according to his testimony, was, “More as a consultant than anything else.”

On this evidence the trial justice found that there was a lease to Duffy for a term of five years, from 1932 until 1937, and that Duffy controlled, or participated in the control of, these premises at the time the plaintiff was injured. In reaching this conclusion he stated: “Now you might say: true, there was a lease there, but there is no proof that he was in the control and management of the premises under the lease. I am inclined to think that that statement cannot properly be made. I think Duffy is in this thing more than appears on the surface. I think he had all through these years the control and management, perhaps not to the same extent and in the same way as the corporation had, but I do not think it can be — I can not get myself to believe that Duffy was in this thing altogether and only as we heard it.”

*336 Later in his opinion, finding the corporation also liable, he said: “Now as far as the corporation is concerned it seems to me that is a very clear and simple proposition; the corporation is absolutely in control; there can be no question about that. ... I do not think there can be any question made about the corporation being not only the owner of all this personal property there, but in the control and management of these premises.”

Duffy contends that there is no evidence in the record that he, personally, either controlled and managed the premises or invited the plaintiff thereon. He argues further that both he and the corporation cannot be held liable, on any theory that he and the corporation had a joint control and management, or a several control and management of these premises, because the declaration is merely against Duffy individually as the tenant in control of the premises. Recognizing the difficulty of determining that defendant Duffy had personal control of the premises, in the face of the evidence which, as he found, established the absolute control thereof by the corporation, the trial justice apparently tried to resolve this difficulty by holding that both had control, but without finding whether that control was joint or several.

During the colloquy with plaintiff’s counsel, concerning several troublesome aspects of this problem which arose on defendant’s motion for nonsuit, he observed: “It is pretty clear that bqth these parties, both Duffy and Neighborhood Druggist can not be lessees at the same time.” Plaintiff’s counsel replied: “They are all joined as defendants. Duffy says that Neighborhood Druggist is a tenant and lessee; Mr. Di Leone says that Duffy was in there under a lease from 1932 to 1937.” A moment before, counsel had also urged that: “The Neighborhood Druggist is in there, too, because Mr. Duffy and Mr. McCarthy are operating this thing for their own benefit, and when the time is right to use the *337 corporate entity, all right, if not, use the individual entity; and that is why they are all joined defendants here.”

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 277, 64 R.I. 332, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-duffy-ri-1940.