Kline v. J. C. Penney Co.

314 P.2d 989, 153 Cal. App. 2d 717
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 11, 1957
DocketCiv. 17323
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 314 P.2d 989 (Kline v. J. C. Penney Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kline v. J. C. Penney Co., 314 P.2d 989, 153 Cal. App. 2d 717 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

BRAZIL, J. pro tem. *

Six-year-old plaintiff Terry Kline prevailed before a jury in an action for damages against defendant J. C. Penney Stores. From the judgment, after denial of its motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals.

The child injured his hand one day when he was in the store with his mother and sister who were interested in buying some clothes. While they were thus preoccupied, Terry went over to the end of the escalator on the second floor, and while playing around there got his hand caught in the opening where the continuous hand rail of the escalator returns through the floor. Around the aperture are stiff bristles, dark in color, which effectively keep anything larger than a ruler from going through the hole. The bristles are all around the returning hand rail and actually come in contact with it. The child was putting his hand on the moving rail and following it down, stooping to do so; in momentarily looking away, his hand got “sucked” into the opening; and it was badly lacerated. A section manager of the defendant store quickly stopped the escalator by pressing a button, and he got the child’s hand out by reversing the escalator with a key he regularly carried.

The escalator had been in use for about five years without any material change. There was evidence that other children *719 had on previous occasions gotten hurt in much the same way as Terry, and employees had knowledge of several such instances. They also had knowledge that children had used the same place to engage in play while those who should have been watching them were busy shopping.

Appellant does not include insufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment as one of its grounds of appeal. Its claims of error in short form are these: (1) the amount sued for was below the jurisdiction of the superior court, (2) two faulty instructions, (3) misstatement of evidence by plaintiff’s attorney in his argument, concurred in by the court, and (4) denial of a fair trial because of conduct of plaintiff’s attorney.

The defendant’s claim that the superior court had no jurisdiction to try the case is based on what took place before the jury was sworn. The record discloses: “Mr. Teerlink: The other matter, your Honor, would be the question of plaintiff [s] moving to amend their prayer for damages from the sum of $20,000 general damages down to the sum of $3,000. The Court: Of course, the motion will be granted. . . . Mr. Custer: Wait a minute. Now, is this in the jurisdiction of the Superior Court? Mr. Teerlink: Three thousand plus specials. All right, three thousand and one dollar, Judge. The Court: All right. Motion granted.” And that’s all there was said about it until the point shows up in appellant’s opening brief. The case was tried, argued and decided with concurrence of all on the obvious basis that the prayer of the complaint was amended to $3,001 and not $3,000. The first statement of the trial judge in response to the attorney’s statement of his desire about the amount of the prayer is in the future tense; his second statement was the order which reduced the amount of the prayer. The conduct of the parties thereafter supports this interpretation.

The two instructions which appellant claims were erroneously given, the emphasis being that of appellant and not of the trial court, are as follows:

“Proprietors of premises who invite children on them must use care to keep them reasonably safe, not omitting precautions against injury from childish impulses. This doctrine is but one phase of the wider doctrine that an owner must keep his premises reasonably safe for the use of the people whom he invites to come on them, an application of the general doctrine with special references to the nature of children, and in accordance with the principle that what constitutes due care in a *720 given instance depends on the degree of the danger to be apprehended. Because children are more heedless and have less discretion in capacity to avoid danger than adults, more care must be exercised by others for their safety.”
“Ordinarily it is necessary to exercise greater caution for the protection and safety of a young child than for an adult person who possesses normal physical and mental faculties. When dealing with children, one must anticipate the ordinary behavior of children. The fact that they usually cannot and do not exercise the same degree of prudence for their own safety as adults, that they are often thoughtless and impulsive, imposes a duty to exercise a proportional vigilance and caution on those dealing with children, and from whose conduct injury to a child may develop.”

The appellant in its opening brief makes this statement: “Concededly, the defendant had knowledge that children playing at the place might be injured, either by inserting their hands or fingers between the brush and the handrail or by holding onto the handrail while looking elsewhere and having a hand drawn into the aperture. Such was the danger to be apprehended and defendant owed the duty to exercise ordinary care to avoid such an injury, and, in that ‘ordinary care’ would be care commensurate with the danger.”

Before considering appellant’s objections to the two quoted instructions, it is well to note that these were not all that was said by the trial judge in his charge to the jury on the subject of negligence, duty or proximate cause. Negligence, proximate cause, ordinary care were all properly defined. The jury was told that defendant was not an insurer or guarantor ; that no inference of negligence arose from the mere happening of an accident; that the only duty imposed on the defendant in this case was to use ordinary care to keep the premises reasonably safe for the plaintiff; that, if the defendant should have known in the exercise of ordinary care that the escalator may cause injuries to minor children, it had the duty to take whatever precautions ordinary care would dictate to protect invited children from such an instrumentality. An instruction on unavoidable accidents was also given.

The first instruction complained of is taken verbatim from the text of Kataoha v. May Dept. Stores Co., 60 Cal.App.2d 177 at 184 [140 P.2d 467], which case also involves a small child who got his hand caught in an escalator while playing around unobserved, when his mother was busy shopping. While it may be true that “it is a dangerous practice, *721 and one not to be followed, to take excerpts from opinions of the courts of last resort and indiscriminately change them into instructions to juries,” (Sloan v. Stearns, 137 Cal.App.2d 289 at 300 [290 P.2d 382]) it does not follow that it is error to do so. This quotation is not an indiscriminate use of an excerpt from a decision, but one that appears applicable to a substantially similar set of facts. Without the aid of appellant’s italicizing, it isn’t easy to find out just what is wrong with it.

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Related

Brown v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.
514 So. 2d 439 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1987)
Estabrook v. JC Penney Company
464 P.2d 325 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
314 P.2d 989, 153 Cal. App. 2d 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-j-c-penney-co-calctapp-1957.