Lake v. Emigh

190 P.2d 550, 121 Mont. 87, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 17
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1948
Docket8719
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 190 P.2d 550 (Lake v. Emigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake v. Emigh, 190 P.2d 550, 121 Mont. 87, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 17 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CHOATE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for damages for personal injuries. In considering it the history of the ease becomes material. The case was tried in the district court of Silver Bow county in May 1944, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $8,000 from which defendant appealed (Lake v. Emigh, Mont. 167 Pac. (2d) 575). Upon that appeal the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. The second trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $6,000. This judgment is now before us for review-on defendant’s appeal therefrom.

There is little material difference in the facts established on the first and second trials of the ease, thus making applicable the rule of the law of the case (Eliason v. Geil, 116 Mont. 434, 154 Pac. (2d) 277) and, unless otherwise indicated, the facts commented upon in this opinion are those which appear in the transcript before us on the present appeal. Likewise, plaintiff did not amend her complaint following the reversal of the first judgment. Consequently the issues of fact are identical with those considered on the first appeal except as to the issue of contributory negligence in the use of the ladder which was modified in our former opinion.

One Eli Virta was the owner of.three houses on the corner of Lee Avenue and Broadway in Butte. One of these houses faced north on Broadway and was designated as 476 Broadway. The other two houses were duplex dwelling houses facing east on Lee Avenue, which runs north and south. The southernmost of the two duplexes was on the corner of Lee Avenue and an alley that paralleled Broadway. The south apartment of this duplex *90 was No. 21 and the north apartment was No. 23. There was a small passageway between the southern and the northern duplex and the second house also consisted of two apartments numbered 25 and 27. So that there were four apartments, two in each house, numbered from the alley to Broadway as No. 21, 23, 25, and 27 respectively.

The southernmost duplex was occupied by Mrs. Tikkanen in No. 21 and the plaintiff lived in No. 23. Across the passageway in No. 25 lived Mrs. Branson and her mother, Mrs. Kauhanen, and No. 27 was occupied by one Kauppola. In May 1935 the plaintiff and her husband rented the apartment at No: 23 Lee Avenue from Mr. Virta’s agent, Mrs. Magda Syren.

In the back yard to the rear of the two duplexes were three clotheslines. One was attached to the rear of apartment No. 23 and ran diagonally in a southwesterly direction across the yard to a telephone pole on the alley. The second line was attached to the rear of apartment No. 25 and was fastened to the same telephone pole. A short line was attached to the rear of apartment No. 21.

The clothesline at No. 25 consisted of a rope running over pulleys at either end. A small platform .was provided to place clothes baskets etc. at the end nearest the house. The record does not reveal the height of the line at the house but the evidence is that it had to be reached by a ladder six or seven feet in height. This ladder was constructed of 2 x 4 uprights with .1x4 steps. The top of the ladder was nailed to a 2 x 4 affixed to a traditional brick edifice euphemistically called a lavatory. At the top of the ladder was a board eight inches wide and 20 inches long upon which the person using the clothesline could stand while hanging out clothes.

On November 25, 1935, while the plaintiff was hanging clothes on the line affixed to the rear of No. 25 Lee Avenue, the clothesline broke and she fell a distance of six or seven feet to the ground and suffered the injuries of which she is complaining.

Two grounds of negligence were alleged in the complaint. First, that the defendant and his agents permitted the clothes *91 line to become weak and rotten and not in a reasonably safe condition for the use for wbicb it was intended. Second, that defendant permitted, tbe step-ladder by means of which access was had to the clothesline to become loose from its fastenings against the outbuilding and to become unsteady and not in a reasonably safe condition for use. Defendant pleaded contributory negligence of plaintiff as the sole cause of her injuries.

On the former appeal of this case (Lake v. Emigh, supra) we held that so far as the use of the clothesline was concerned the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence simply because she knew the line was old and worn since she had no means of knowing the extent of its decay or that it was not strong enough to withstand ordinary use for its intended purpose. We further held that as to the ladder the plaintiff must be held as a matter of law to have known of its shaky condition and to have appreciated the danger arising from that condition; that therefore plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in using the ladder in its shaky condition and had assumed the risk incident to its use. The case was therefore sent back for a new trial at which we directed that the defective condition of the ladder should be eliminated.

Law of the present ease. The decision on the former appeal has become the law of this case as to all matters which were directly involved, in and considered and determined on said appeal. See Finlen v. Heinze, 32 Mont. 354, 366, 80 Pac. 918, and cases cited therein. Also Anderson v. Border, 87 Mont. 4, 8, 285 Pac. 174, 176, in which we said : * * as to all points which were directly involved in, and were passed upon, in the former appeal, and which are involved in this ease, whether the opinion is right or wrong, it is the law of the ease, was binding upon the trial court, and is binding upon us. ’ ’ Citing Carlson v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 86 Mont. 78, 281 Pac. 913, in which a long array of Montana eases supporting the above rule are cited.

We will now consider the contentions advanced by defendant.

First, the theory of plaintiff’s case was that the use of the defective instrumentalities, including both the ladder and *92 the clothesline was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries- and that since on the first appeal the issue as to the defective condition of the ladder was eliminated from consideration it is “beyond human power to say” that the breaking of the clothesline alone was the cause of plaintiff’s injuries. We are unable to agree with this contention. As we view the record there is evidence which if believed by the jury warranted a verdict for plaintiff on the theory that her injuries resulted from the defective condition of the clothesline and not from the shaky condition of the ladder. The fact should not be lost sight of in this case that however “shaky” the ladder or its platform, it did not collapse nor give way either before or after plaintiff fell from it. Plaintiff’s husband, William Lake, testified that-his wife “was hanging out clothes and the clothesline broke and she fell down from that platform, right down to the boardwalk. ’ ’ Mr. Lake witnessed the accident. Looking through the door window he saw the clothes fall “down on the ground.” Witness then went out to see what had happened to his wife and he “saw her shaking at the top of the step ladder,” and also saw the platform “shaking just a little bit” and in just a second or two plaintiff fell back to the sidewalk.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P.2d 550, 121 Mont. 87, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-emigh-mont-1948.