Kay v. Menard

754 A.2d 760, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 155, 2000 WL 869350
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 27, 2000
Docket97-535-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 754 A.2d 760 (Kay v. Menard) 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
Kay v. Menard, 754 A.2d 760, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 155, 2000 WL 869350 (R.I. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

Ten years ago, Robert Kay tumbled down an elevator shaft from the fourth floor elevator opening to the basement of the Mongeon Building in the City of Woon-socket. He was seriously injured. He sued the owner of the building, Edward Menard, accusing Menard of negligence. A Superior Court trial jury awarded him $275,000 for his injuries and damages. Menard, in this appeal, challenges the final judgment entered in the case.

Facts/Case Travel

Robert Kay (Robert or the plaintiff) and Susan Bergeron (Susan), his girlfriend, lived together in a fourth-floor apartment in the five-story Mongeon Building. The building contained several retail businesses, as well as residential apartments. Edward Menard (Menard or the defendant), lived in a basement apartment and operated a retail business on the second floor of his building.

The building contained a single manually operated elevator. For a tenant to use the elevator, he or she first would summon the elevator by pressing a button next to the elevator door located in the hallway on each floor. That door could not be opened until the elevator had reached the particular floor from which the button had been pressed. When the elevator reached that floor, a mechanical interlock, designed to keep all the doors locked, then would disengage the door-locking mechanism, permitting the particular door to be opened. The interlock door system was designed to prevent any door from being opened when no elevator was present at a particular floor in order to prevent anyone from falling into the elevator shaft. 1 Once the hallway elevator door was disengaged, the door could then be opened from the hallway and the person intending to use the elevator then would reach in and lift a wire inner-mesh gate attached to the elevator in order to enter the elevator. He or she, after entering, then would have to lower the wire mesh gate until it touched the floor of the elevator; otherwise, the elevator would not operate.

Every evening, the defendant, Menard, who lived in a basement apartment, typically would disable the elevator at his basement floor level until the following morning, by raising the inner-mesh gate a few inches above the elevator’s floor. This prevented the elevator from being operated and provided some measure of security for his tenants. When a tenant, during evening and late hours, wished to use the elevator, he or she would press the button near the elevator door in the hallway where he or she was located. A loud *764 buzzer then would sound in the defendant’s basement apartment, and he would respond by lowering the elevator’s inner-mesh gate to the elevator’s floor, thereby setting the elevator in motion to respond to the floor from which the button had been pressed. Having explained the workings of the Mongeon Building’s elevator, we turn now to the events that generated the instant litigation and the appeal now before us.

Sometime just before April 11, 1990, Robert proposed marriage to Susan, his girlfriend. She accepted his proposal. Later, on April 11, at about 6 p.m., they decided to celebrate their recent betrothal and went out to dinner at a restaurant across the street from the Mongeon Building. They dined and drank and, when leaving, ordered a take-out dinner for Me-nard, who they knew would be in his apartment. They returned to the Mon-geon Building, and entered by a third-floor entrance which was accessible from the street sidewalk because the building was situated on a hillside. One of them pressed the elevator button to summon the elevator to the third floor. When the elevator reached that floor, they used it to go down to Menard’s basement apartment and to give him the take-out dinner they had purchased for him. They stayed with Menard for a short time, and then left to continue to celebrate their betrothal at the Hillside Tavern.

Celebrate they did, for several hours, until Robert, with bubbling enthusiasm, toasted his future bride by telling Susan that marriage would be like a ball and chain for him. That brought to a close the celebration, and Susan left. Robert wobbled out after her, seeking to apologize. Susan forgave him, and they returned to the Mongeon Building at about 10:30 p.m. When they did, they entered again through the third-floor side entrance and then walked up the stairway to their fourth-floor apartment. Robert told Susan that he was going to go down to visit Menard to see if all was well with him, and to inquire about whether he enjoyed the take-out dinner. He told Susan that first he was going into the apartment to get a sweater. As he was walking towards the apartment, he heard Susan press the elevator button and heard the buzzer sound for the elevator.

When Robert came out of the apartment, he walked to the elevator, assumed the elevator had reached his floor, opened the elevator door and leaned down to lift the wire mesh gate. While doing that, he turned his head to look for Susan and said, “are you coming.” There was no elevator waiting for him, and Robert’s momentum in leaning down to pick up the wire mesh gate carried him into the open elevator shaft. He fell four floors down onto the top of the elevator that was still at the basement level.

As would be expected, Robert suffered serious multiple injuries, and he was taken to Landmark Hospital in Woonsocket. At the hospital, his blood alcohol content (BAC) was recorded at .23 percent. He later was transferred to the Rhode Island Hospital trauma unit. There, a second blood test revealed that his BAC level had risen to .25 percent. Without intending to be facetious, Robert, although dead drunk, fortunately was still very much alive.

In January 1993, Robert sued Menard, asserting in his Superior Court civil complaint that Menard had been negligent in failing to maintain his building elevator and door in a safe condition. After trial, a Superior Court jury returned a verdict in favor of Robert and awarded him damages of $550,000. However, because the jury found Robert to have been comparatively negligent, it assessed his negligence at fifty percent and then reduced his award to $275,000, as required by the trial justice’s instruction. Robert’s motion for a new trial or additur, and Menard’s motion for a new trial all were denied by the trial justice. Menard timely appealed. 2

*765 In his appeal, Menard alleges that the trial justice erred in: (1) permitting introduction of evidence of his intoxication; (2) failing to instruct the jury on the doctrines of assumption of the risk, and “looking but failing to see;” (3) failing to instruct the jury that passengers are not prohibited from using freight elevators; (4) failing to give a curative instruction after the plaintiffs counsel suggested in his closing argument that the defendant was entitled to rebuttal; (5) giving inappropriate instructions with respect to life and work life expectancy tables; (6) failing to instruct the jury to calculate the present-day value of any damage award; (7) instructing the jury to consider unproven future medical expenses; and, (8) permitting the jury to consider unproven scarring on the plaintiff.

Additional facts will be presented as needed in the course of reviewing those contentions.

1. Evidence of Intoxication

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
754 A.2d 760, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 155, 2000 WL 869350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kay-v-menard-ri-2000.