M. W. Savage Factories, Inc. v. Parker

294 F. 455, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2506
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1923
DocketNo. 6273
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 294 F. 455 (M. W. Savage Factories, Inc. v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. W. Savage Factories, Inc. v. Parker, 294 F. 455, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2506 (8th Cir. 1923).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

This is an action for damages for personal injury alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant (plaintiff in error here). In the trial court plaintiff (defendant in error here) had a verdict, and judgment was entered thereon. By this writ of error defendant seeks to reverse that judgment.

The complaint alleged in substance that on or about the 9th day of March, 1921, defendant was engaged in carrying on a store at Elk River, Minn., known as the M. W. Savage Community Store; that on or about that day plaintiff had occasion to go and did go to that store as a customer, and that while in the store she had occasion, in the transaction of her business therein, to go to the office in the rear room of said store; that'while on her way to said office she fell into the basement through an opening in the floor, and was injured, by reason of the fact that defendant had carelessly and negligently allowed a trapdoor covering said opening to be and remain open, and had carelessly and negligently failed to provide guards or guard rails for said trapdoor when the same was open, and had carelessly and negligently failed.to have the place at and about said trapdoor properly and adequately lighted. ■ Defendant, by its answer, makes a general denial of the allegations of the complaint, except that it admits that it owned and operated the store, and alleges that the injuries sustained by the plaintiff, if any, [457]*457were due to her own negligence. At the close of the testimony in chief for the plaintiff, and also again at the close of all the testimony offered in the case, the defendant moved the court for a directed verdict in its favor, and it is upon the refusal of the court to grant this instruction that defendant bases the assignments of error upon which it has here principally relied. It may be said here, as to the other instructions requested and refused, and upon which errors are assigned, that they are, so far as they ought to have been given, sufficiently and correctly given in the general charge of the court.

The evidence offered shows that on the day in question, about 1 o’clock in the afternoon, plaintiff, accompanied by a Miss Edna Barrett, went to the store of defendant for the purpose of returning or exchanging an article of merchandise which her husband had bought there a day or two before. She had never been to the store before, and knew only one of the employees working there, a Mr. Keays, with whom she wished to talk about the matter.

The store was an ordinary grocery store, situated in a small building, fronting south on the street about 18 feet and running back about 32 feet. The interior of the store was divided into two rooms, the front or south one being -somewhat the larger, by a partition of shelving boarded on the back and extending to within about 2% feet from the ceiling; the shelves opening towards the front room. The front room was the part of the store in which the business with customers was carried on, being equipped with counters and the other things usually found in such stores, and the back room was used for the storing and keeping of surplus merchandise. There was an opening in the partition between the two rooms, near the west side, called by some of the witnesses an archway, one of the shelves extending entirely over the top of the opening'. This opening had no door in it, and no curtain or curtains covering it. It was about as high as an ordinary door, and the part of it not taken up at this time by some boxes of merchandise extending a few feet from the floor, which had been placed in it on the right-hand side, was about 2 feet wide. This opening was used, and intended to he used, only by the employees of the store in going back and forth between the two rooms; but there was no notice to that effect, and no warning against its use by others. When the plaintiff and her companion entered the store, there was only one employee in the front room, a Miss Fern Smith, a clerk or saleswoman for defendant. She was at the time behind the counter on the west side of the room, waiting on a customer. This clerk was not at that time known to the plaintiff.

The only part of the evidence in which there is any substantial conflict between witnesses is as to what was said and done at this time. Plaintiff and her companion, Miss Barrett, testified that plaintiff inquired of Miss Smith for Mr. Keays, and was told by her that he was in the office in there, pointing or motioning toward the opening in the partition, and telling her to go in there. Miss Smith, called for defendant, testified that plaintiff asked where Mr. Keays was, and she answered, “He is in the back room, eating his lunch,” and that nothing further was said; that she went on wrapping up her package, and plain[458]*458tiff started toward the back room. Oscar E. Moberg, a witness called for defendant, who was talking to the customer for whom Miss Smith was putting up the order, testified that the plaintiff asked Miss Smith • for Mr. Keays, and that she answered he was in the back room, eating lunch, and that, so far as he knew and heard, that was all that was said. Immediately following this conversation, plaintiff entered the back room by the opening through the partition and, seeing Mr. Keays and a Mr. Roberts, who was at that time the manager of the store, sitting by a .table in the northeast corner of the back room, eating lunch, proceeded towards them, going through aisles or openings between the boxes and bags of merchandise that were piled on the floor. While thus going toward them, she fell into an opening in the floor in which there was a stairway leading to the basement below, the trapdoor of which had been left open, and around which there were no guard rails,an(l was injured. The day was cloudy, and there was only one window in this back room, about 3 by 6 feet in size, by which it was lighted.

The question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence was, under all the evidence, clearly one of fact for the jury, under proper instructions by the court, and it was not seriously contended on the argument here but that such instructions were given by the learned trial judge. We are clearly of the opinion that they were.

The assignments of error based.upon the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendant rest upon the contention that, the court having charged that plaintiff could only recover if she was, as to the back room, an invitee, there was no evidence to justify a finding that she was such invitee, either express or implied. This contention is, we think, completely answered by that part of the charge of the court, in which we entirely concur, wherein the learned trial judge says:

“Now, it appears from the evidence in this case that the defendant was a shopkeeper at the time and place in question,. and that the plaintiff was a customer when she entered the store of the defendant. A shopkeeper impliedly invites customers to come into his store for the purpose of transacting business with him. He may also expressly invite customers to come upon his premises. The shopkeeper is held by law to the duty of using ordinary care to maintain his premises in a reasonably safe condition for such customers as may come upon the premises. And in this case, upon the undisputed facts, the defendant must be held to have extended an implied invitation to the plaintiff to come into the defendant’s store to transact any business she had with the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
294 F. 455, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-w-savage-factories-inc-v-parker-ca8-1923.