Klein v. Montgomery Ward & Co.

384 P.2d 978, 235 Or. 315, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 339
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 384 P.2d 978 (Klein v. Montgomery Ward & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 384 P.2d 978, 235 Or. 315, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 339 (Or. 1963).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, Emeline B. Klein, from a judgment which the circuit court entered in favor of the defendant, Montgomery Ward & Co. The action which ended in that manner was instituted by the plaintiff to recover damages for an injury which she suffered when she fell down a flight of four steps in an entrance way of the defendant’s Portland store. The challenged judgment was entered after (1) the defendant had moved unsuccessfully for a directed verdict; (2) the jury had returned a verdiet for the plaintiff; and (3) the defendant’s motion for the entry of judgment in its favor, notwithstanding the verdict, had been allowed.

The plaintiff presents two assignments of error. The first challenges the ruling which entered judgment in the defendant’s favor notwithstanding the verdiet, and the second questions a ruling which sustained the defendant’s objections to the reception in evidence of a Portland ordinance which provides in the instances *317 to which it is applicable that handrails must be placed not farther apart than 66 inches upon staircases that are 88 inches or more in width.

The complaint made several charges of negligence but only two of them were submitted to the jury. Appellant’s (plaintiff’s) brief states, “The Court, however, submitted to the jury only two of plaintiff’s specifications of negligence, relating to the condition of the step and, under the common law, the lack of a middle handrail.” The plaintiff does not contend that error was committed when the other specifications were not submitted to the jury.

November 19, 1960 the plaintiff and her husband drove their automobile to the defendant’s store where the plaintiff intended to do some shopping. After the plaintiff’s husband had parked the car in the defendant’s parking lot, the two proceeded to enter the store through its easterly entrance. The latter was slightly more than 30 feet broad and consisted of a series of seven doors. When a customer had. gone through one of the doors, he was in an area 30 feet long and 42 inches broad. We will deem it a vestibule. If after the customer had walked ahead 42 inches, after going through the door, he had crossed the vestibule and was upon the upper of the flight of four steps. When he descended the steps, he was upon the store’s first floor. The plaintiff immediately before accident had taken, in part, the course just described; that is she had gone through one of the doors, had walked ahead 42 inches and had come to the top of the four steps. There something went wrong and she fell down the stairs.

Upon direct examination by her attorney, the plain *318 tiff testified that she did not know what caused her to fall. Her testimony was:

“Q. Well, do you specifically know what caused you to fall?
“A. I couldn’t say. All I know is my foot slipped off the step and I was down there.”

The plaintiff testified that her health had been good. She operated a small coffee shop. At the time of her mishap the plaintiff was wearing “walking shoes,” so she swore, and added that they had “a full heel.”

On each side of the broad vestibule area and staircase, there was a short wall at right angles to the stairs. Fastened into each wall was a handrail for the use of anyone who went up or down the stairs at that point. Besides those two handrails there were four more in this flight of steps. They occurred at intervals of 81 inches.

The plaintiff did not enter the store through a door that was adjacent to the vestibule walls, but through a door which was near the center of the entrance. She testified that she had been in the store many times, but had used this entrance “seldom.”

The door through which the plaintiff entered was a double door. Its width was six feet. Each of its two component doors was, therefore, three feet wide. The two component doors swung open from their middle, and opened outwardly. Each was fastened on its far side by hinges to a column-like form that stood immediately adjacent to that side of the door, and separated the latter from the next set of doors.

On each side of the double door through which the plaintiff entered there was one of the handrails that *319 we mentioned. The handrail was fastened at its upper end to the column that stood adjacent to the door. The handrail was about 30 inches above the vestibule floor. It extended from the column, parallel to the vestibule floor until it reached a point above the upper step, where it bent downward at the same angle of the steps until it was above the lowest of the four steps. There it turned directly downward and terminated in that step.

The distance between the handrails which stood at the sides of the door through which the plaintiff entered the store was 81 inches. That, as we have said., was the distance that separated all of the handrails. Thus when the plaintiff passed through the door there was a handrail to right and another to her left. The plaintiff did not mention through which of the two doors she came. However, she testified that neither handrail was within reach. We have mentioned that the double door through which the plaintiff entered opened from its middle.

The plaintiff’s husband held the door open while she walked through. Observation teaches that one who holds a double door open for another, holds open only one of its two component parts. Therefore, no one enters through the center of a double door. He enters to the right or to the left of the center, depending upon which of the two component doors was open. Since the total distance between the handrails was 81 inches, the plaintiff upon entering through the double door must have been within arm length of a handrail. Had she moved slightly to the right or to the left she could, have grasped a handrail. She made no effort to do so. She knew of their presence. She and her husband were the .only people in the entrance way when she fell.

*320 In the following testimony the plaintiff described her fall:

“A. Well, my husband opened the door and I went to step off of the top step to go down these stairs, and I remember my foot slipping over the— like this (demonstrating) — and the next thing I knew I was down at the bottom of the stairs, all crumpled up.
“Q. Well do you specifically know what caused you to fall?
“A. I couldn’t say. All I know is my foot slipped off of that step and I was down there. It just happened so fast that actually I didn’t realize until I was down there what had happened to me.
“Q. What was the condition of your clothes ?
“A. Well, my jacket, — like I say, I had never worn my white jacket before; it was the first time I had ever worn it, and it was wet and muddy from down there on the floor, and my black skirt was a mess from mud and water where I had fell.”

November 19, 1960, the day of the accident, was a very rainy day. As we noticed through quotation of the plaintiff’s testimony her clothing was “wet and muddy” after the fall.

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

Related

Moorehead v. Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District
359 P.3d 314 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
Washington v. District of Columbia
429 A.2d 1362 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1981)
Lipman Wolfe & Co. v. Teeples & Thatcher, Inc.
522 P.2d 467 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1974)
Gubalke Ex Rel. Gubalke v. Estate of Anthes
202 N.W.2d 836 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1972)
Landolt v. Flame, Inc.
492 P.2d 785 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1972)
Bertrand v. Palm Springs & European Health Spa, Inc.
480 P.2d 424 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1971)
Pribble v. Safeway Stores, Inc.
437 P.2d 745 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
384 P.2d 978, 235 Or. 315, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-montgomery-ward-co-or-1963.