MacKey v. Allen

396 S.W.2d 55, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 7, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 396 S.W.2d 55 (MacKey v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKey v. Allen, 396 S.W.2d 55, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 95 (Ky. 1965).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

Early in the afternoon of December 15, 1961, Mrs. Roberta B. Mackey was having her hair dressed at Ken’s Beauty Salon on Central Avenue in Louisville. One of the young ladies employed in the shop became ill and Dr. Kenneth Hodge was summoned from the Central Medical Clinic, located diagonally across the street. At his request Mrs. Adams, proprietor of the beauty shop, got her automobile and transported the young lady over to the clinic. Mrs. Adams did not return at once to the beauty shop. Meanwhile, customers began to arrive pursuant to their appointments with her and the lady who had been taken ill, and the operator who had completed the job begun *57 on Mrs. Mackey’s hair by Mrs. Adams asked Mrs. Mackey if she would be kind enough, on leaving, to go over to the clinic and find out from Mrs. Adams whether the customers should be asked to wait or to make new appointments. Mrs. Mackey obliged, and went over to the clinic for that purpose. She had never been there before. There were two identical doors side by side (five or six feet apart) under a canopy or marquee bearing the name “Central Medical Clinic.” The left door actually was the only entrance to the clinic. The right door opened directly from a sidewalk outside of the building into an unlighted stairway leading to a storage area in the basement. Assuming that both doors entered the clinic Mrs. Mackey opened the one to the right and stepped inside, all in one continuous motion. She landed at the foot of the stairs and was injured.

The building in which the accident occurred was owned by George S. and Helen W. Allen and occupied by two tenants, Arthur J. Voss, d/b/a Voss Pharmacy, and Central Medical Clinic, a partnership consisting of Dr. Hodge and Dr. Stuart Cohen. The basement storage area into which Mrs. Mackey fell was used by both Voss and the clinic. Each had a key to the door in question, --’hich ordinarily was kept locked. Within two hours or so before Mrs. Mack-ey’s accident a quantity of merchandise ordered by Voss had been delivered by two employes of Our Own Deliveries, Inc. Voss unlocked the door to the basement and directed the delivery men to store the packages below. When the delivery men left, they pulled the door to but did not lock it. In Voss’ own words, “I opened the door to the basement for a delivery from Gould’s Wholesale Supply House. I went back in the drug store and got busy and' forgot to check to see if the basement door had been locked after the delivery boy left. I didn’t tell the delivery boy to lock the door after he completed his delivery. * * I left the store about one-thirty and returned to my home, and I got a call — I forget whether I called the store or whether they called me and told me that someone had fallen down the basement stairway.”

In this action Mrs. Mackey sued Voss, the Allens, the doctors, and the delivery company for her personal injuries and damages. Her husband joined a claim against the same defendants for loss of consortium. After the taking of depositions the trial court sustained motions for summary judgment by the Allens and the doctors. At the close of the evidence for the plaintiffs a verdict was directed in favor of the remaining defendants, Voss and the delivery company. The Mackeys appeal.

As pointed out in a very able summary delivered by the trial court in passing on the motions for directed verdict, the facts of the case are virtually undisputed. Further details will be provided as our discussion relates to each defendant or set of defendants.

1. Central Medical Clinic.

In his deposition Dr. Hodge admitted that another lady, a Mrs. Showalter, had mistakenly entered the same door and fallen down the same stairway about a month before Mrs. Mackey’s accident. Following Mrs. Showalter’s fall he and Dr. Cohen actually discussed the advisability of putting up some kind of sign to prevent further accidents of the same nature. This evidence, we believe, with an appropriate admonition limiting its purpose, would have been admissible against the doctors to show their knowledge of the dangerous condition, hence the foreseeability of the accident. 38 Am.Jur. 1012-1014 (Negligence § 314); Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Jackson’s Adm’r, 250 Ky. 92, 61 S.W.2d 1104 (1933); O’Neil & Hearne v. Bray’s Adm’x, 262 Ky. 377, 90 S.W.2d 353, 356 (1936). In the absence of evidence to the contrary, Dr. Hodge’s deposition concerning the previous accident was sufficient to indicate its having occurred under substantially similar circumstances.

In the briefs much discussion has been devoted to the technical status of Mrs. *58 Mackey, whether she was an invitee, licensee, or trespasser. We are inclined to regard her as a business invitee of the clinic, because her visit to the premises was “for the convenience or arose out of the necessities” of another person who definitely was in the clinic for purposes of the possessor’s business, that other person being Mrs. Adams. Cf. Restatement of Torts, § 332, Comment d. The principle that a business invitee’s guest is also an invitee was recognized in City of Madisonville v. Poole, Ky., 249 S.W.2d 133 (1952), and the Restatement of Torts has been cited repeatedly by this court as a reliable source of authority on this general subject. Cf. Kentucky & West Virginia Power Co. v. Stacy, 291 Ky. 325, 164 S.W.2d 537, 170 A.L.R. 1 (1942).

Certainly Mrs. Mackey was not a trespasser, and it really makes no difference whether she was an invitee or a bare licensee, because the basic distinction between the duties of the possessor is that he owes an invitee the duty of discovering a dangerous condition, whereas he owes a licensee only the duty to warn him of a dangerous condition already known to the possessor. Kentucky & West Virginia Power Co. v. Stacy, supra. If the possessor is aware of a condition involving unreasonable risk to the licensee and by the exercise of ordinary care should foresee that the licensee will not discover it or realize the risk, he has at least a duty to warn him. Coleman v. Baker, Ky., 382 S.W.2d 843, 848 (1964). In this case it is beyond cavil that the doctors knew of the dangerous condition.

It is true that there was no intent on the part of the doctors to invite people into the basement. But the extension over their marquee and sign over both doors gave the appearance of inviting entry through either. That circumstance alone distinguishes the case from Farmer v. Modern Motors Co., 235 Ky. 483, 31 S.W.2d 716 (1930), and Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Sanderson, 175 Ky. 11, 192 S.W. 869, L.R.A. 1917D (1917). In neither of those cases was there a sign on or over the door to suggest that it was an entrance to the visitor’s intended destination. It is our opinion that an apparent invitation must be equated with an invitation in fact.

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Bluebook (online)
396 S.W.2d 55, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackey-v-allen-kyctapphigh-1965.