Landolt v. Flame, Inc.

492 P.2d 785, 261 Or. 243, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 294
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 492 P.2d 785 (Landolt v. Flame, Inc.) 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
Landolt v. Flame, Inc., 492 P.2d 785, 261 Or. 243, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 294 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

*247 TONGUE, J.

This is an action for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when he went, through a glass door in a hasty exit from a bar after a fistic altercation. The primary negligence alleged :is that the glass exit door would not open “out” with “exit travel” in violation of the county building code.

Plaintiff appeals from an order setting aside a jury verdict of $6,098.75 and granting defendants’ alternative motion for a new trial “on all grounds set forth in the motion.” Those grounds may be summarized as follows:

1. Error in submitting to the jury the issue of building alterations in violation of the building code when (a) they were not pleaded and (b) there was no “proper evidence” that such alterations were made by defendants.

2. Error in admitting as evidence the county building code, the application for a building permit, and the plans for alterations of the building, including the door in question, which was shown as opening “out.”

3. Error in the giving of instructions on (a) violation of a statute as negligence, (b) negligence per se, and (c) emergency.

4. Error and “irregularity in the proceedings” in denying defendants’ motion for mistrial for plaintiff’s “repeated references” to one of defendants’ witnesses as defendants’ “bouncer.”

*248 Because the order granting a new trial must be affirmed if any one of these grounds is well taken, it is necessary to consider each of them. Before considering these various contentions, however, the facts may be briefly summarized.

Plaintiff and another man visited defendants’ bar. Plaintiff testified that he objected to certain language used by another man, who was also sitting at the bar, because of the presence of a lady, also seated at the bar. He and his friend testified that the other man then started a fight in the bar and that they then decided to “get out of there.”

Plaintiff then ran out of the bar, put his hands on the metal “push bar” across the glass exit door, bending the “push bar” badly, and went on through the exit door, which did not open “out” with “exit travel,” as required by the county building code.

Defendants’ witness testified, on the contrary, that plaintiff started the fight. Defendants admitted that the glass exit door did not open “out,” but did not admit that this was in violation of the building code.

Defendants did not, however, deny plaintiff’s medical testimony, which was to the effect that plaintiff’s hands, fingers and wrist were badly cut, requiring the removal of many small pieces of glass and resulting in some permanent injury.

1. The trial court did not err in submitting to the jury “the issue of the building alterations.”

a. Under the allegations of plaintiffs complaint it was not error to submit that issue to the jury.

After alleging that “at all times mentioned herein” defendant The Flame, Inc. was the operator of the *249 restaurant and lounge and that defendants Ratoza and Maras were the owners of the budding, plaintiff’s complaint alleges:

“That it was the duty of the defendants, and each of them, to provide exits from the premises at 12125-12133 NE. Halsey Street, with exit doors which would open with the exiting traffic. Defendants, and each of them, did not perform said duties but wholly neglected the same."

and also:

“That on or about the 7th day of October, 1969, the plaintiff was a business invitee on the premises of 12125-12133 NE. Halsey Street, known as The Flame Restaurant and Lounge and in attempting to exit from said premises, collided with a glass exit door installed in violation of Section 3303 (b) of the Multnomah County Building Code, which said door, instead of opening with the exiting traffic, opened against the exiting traffic and shattered on contact, causing this plaintiff serious and permanent injuries as hereinafter set forth.”

Defendants contend in their brief that:

“It is well-established that in order to show negligence per se for violation of a statute or ordinance, Plaintiff must show: (a) that a statute applied, (b) that the statute was violated, (c) that the defendant was responsible for the violation, and (d) that the violation of the statute was the proximate cause of his injury. Smith v. Portland Traction Co., 226 Or 221, 225, 359 P2d 899 (1961).
“The precise issue here, then, is whether the phrase installed in violation of Section 3303(b) of the Multnomah County Building Code,' in a paragraph of the complaint setting forth another theory of liability — that of the possessor of real property to a business invitee for defects in the land — is to be elevated by any rules of favorable construction *250 into the status of a full and sufficient exposition of an independent basis of recovery.
"* * * * *
“But the issue is not the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action but the question of the sufficiency of the complaint to sustain the relevance of certain profferred evidence which arises on appeal from an order granting a new trial.
“Plaintiff contended during the trial that the complaint set forth an additional basis of liability, one not readily apparent from the face of the complaint. This contention was made at a time when defendants would be forced to bear alone liability with respect to which they might have been entitled to indemnity through timely tender.”

Prom an examination of the complaint, however (as quoted above), as well as from an examination of the transcript of the trial, it appears that plaintiff did not contend that the allegations relating to the building code “set forth an additional basis of liability,” but that plaintiff’s theory of liability was that defendants, as the operators of the bar and the owners of the building, were negligent in owning and operating a place of public assembly with an exit door which would not open “out” with the exit travel. The allegation that the door had been installed in violation of the building code did not set forth “an additional basis of liability.” On the contrary, that allegation was part and parcel of the same theory of liability.

As for the suggestion that under such “an additional basis of liability” there might be a difference in the liability of the defendants and that they “might have been entitled to indemnity through timely tender,” the answer is that: (1) for the reasons just stated, these allegations did not state “an additional basis of liability”; (2) an examination of the record, including the *251

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 P.2d 785, 261 Or. 243, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landolt-v-flame-inc-or-1972.