Kulpa v. General Ice Cream Corp.

43 A.2d 60, 71 R.I. 168, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 28, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 60 (Kulpa v. General Ice Cream Corp.) 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
Kulpa v. General Ice Cream Corp., 43 A.2d 60, 71 R.I. 168, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 35 (R.I. 1945).

Opinion

*169 Flynn, C. J.

This is an action of the case to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from plaintiff’s fall on defendant’s premises, which is alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence. The -trial in the superior court resulted in a jury’s verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,000. Thereafter the trial justice denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial if the plaintiff remitted all of the verdict in excess of $4000. The plaintiff failed to file such remittitur and the case is before us upon exceptions to that ruling taken by both plaintiff and defendant, and also upon defendant’s exceptions to other rulings during the trial.

The declaration is in three counts. In each of them it is alleged in substance that the plaintiff was an invitee in the defendant’s building and that while working on the second floor, in a place previously designated by the defendant, its agents and servants, he was suddenly and without warning precipitated through an opening in that floor, that was concealed by loose boards, to the floor below, thereby sustaining-various injuries and other losses and damages. The negligence, as alleged in these counts, essentially involved defendant’s failure to provide a safe place in which to work *170 and may be summarized respectively as follows: (1) In maintaining an opening hidden by loose boards that were accidentally moved; (2) in maintaining a trap door in the floor, open at times and hidden by loose boards, upon which bags of sugar were piled and that while plaintiff was carrying a bag of sugar which he had picked up therefrom, some of those boards were accidentally caused to move; and (3) in failing to warn the plaintiff of the existence of a danger caused by an opening being hidden by reason of loose boards which were accidentally moved so that plaintiff fell through, such condition being known to the defendant and unknown to the plaintiff.

The evidence discloses the following facts: Plaintiff was an employee of McCarthy Freight System, Inc., hereinafter called McCarthy. The latter was engaged to remove and transport to defendant’s designated plants certain sugar then being stored on the second floor of its warehouse or main building at Pawtucket. The sugar, in bags of one hundred pounds each, was piled up in so-called “tiers”, each tier being two bags wide and eight or nine high. The bags at the bottom were placed on loose boards of varying width and length, which had been first placed upon the cement floor to keep dampness from the sugar.

The defendant’s superintendent directed the plaintiff and his foreman Gilbert Brown where they were to work and designated the particular sugar which was to be removed. Neither of them had ever been in the building before or was aware of any opening in the second floor; nor was either of them warned by the defendant’s agent or anybody else that such an opening existed. No opening or dangerous condition in the floor was visible, according to their evidence, because it was hidden by the loose boards and sugar, which were everywhere. Plaintiff and Brown, on March 26, 1942, had gone to the second floor, where they had worked until late afternoon in accordance with defendant’s directions. There was no artificial light on that floor. The procedure followed by them was to start at the top of a tier and work down, each *171 alternating in taking a bag and putting it on a hand truck. When ten bags were so placed, this truck was taken to the elevator, operated by the defendant’s agent, and down to the ground floor, where other workers for McCarthy would take the bags outside and pack them in a truck for transportation.

Plaintiff and Brown were thus working on a tier and had reached the bags that rested directly on the loose boards. Plaintiff bent his knees, stooped over and picked up his last bag; then he stepped back to brace himself, while he turned the bag over preparatory to placing it on the hand truck; but before he could thus place the bag he was suddenly and without warning precipitated through an opening in the floor, about three feet long and between one and one-half and three feet wide, to a cement floor some thirteen feet below. Brown, who had reached for his bag, did not see plaintiff when he started to fall, but turned back toward the truck in time to see him disappearing through the “hole” into the “pit”. Only the plaintiff’s head and hands were then visible above the floor, on which the bag had fallen. Brown also dropped his bag and ran down the stairs to help the plaintiff. Upon his return to the second floor Brown saw the so-called trap door or cover “landed over on the side” of the opening or hole. Neither plaintiff nor Brown had voluntarily tried in any way to open or operate that trap door or cover.

The defendant’s superintendent testified that before he had left the plant, about fifteen minutes prior to the accident, he had examined the cover and “pushed it with the heel of my shoe to be sure there was no play or any danger of it being unloosed... . Because we were more or less aware it was there. I had no supervisor in the plant and I didn’t want anything to happen.” He further testified that he had made other previous inspections of that cover during which he might kick it, as was done that day “If I had any occasion to doubt its security”. This doubt, he explained, was “that there were strange men in the plant and the hazard consequently was a little greater.” On his arrival that night shortly *172 after the accident he saw the trap door or cover “on the side of the opening. . . . Nearby,” as Brown testified.

This witness also identified a cover in evidence as the one which on the day of the accident had been fitted securely over the hole and was flush with the floor. But Brown and another witness, who had inspected -the premises within a few days after the accident, testified that such cover was not the one which was on the second floor at the time of the accident. According to their testimony, that cover was made from an old icebox door, only half hinged and not fixed to the floor, and that it did not fit snugly into the opening but wobbled and went up and down when you stepped on the end of it.

Defendant’s manager, another witness, also admitted knowledge of the opening but said that it had not been used for more than ten years. According to his testimony, when he was there last, a day or so before the accident, the sugar was piled over it; and the next day after the accident the cover was off the opening and “tipped over and lying a little away from the hole”, as Brown testified. After the accident plaintiff was taken to the hospital from which he was released that night. Subsequently he was treated by three different doctors, whose absence at the trial was explained, 'and he was finally attended by a physician who testified at the trial.

There are twenty-seven exceptions in the defendant’s bill of exceptions, but only nineteen of them are pressed. All the others are either expressly waived or, being neither briefed nor argued, are deemed to be waived. The first group, as argued by defendant, contains exceptions numbered 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 which relate to the denial of the defendant’s separate motions to withdraw from consideration by the jury the first, second and third counts, respectively, and to direct a verdict for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A.2d 60, 71 R.I. 168, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kulpa-v-general-ice-cream-corp-ri-1945.