MacLaughlin v. Hull

87 F.2d 641, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1937
DocketNo. 8253
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 641 (MacLaughlin v. Hull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacLaughlin v. Hull, 87 F.2d 641, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2539 (9th Cir. 1937).

Opinions

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

The appellant was injured by a fall which occurred in the Olympic Hotel in Seattle, Wash., on the evening of February 25, 1935, at 10:30 p. m. She had attended a banquet in the Spanish ballroom of the hotel. The floor level of the Spanish ballroom was 18 inches above the floor, level of the women’s lounge, so that she was required to descend two steps, or three risers, in order to reach the floor of the women’s lounge. She fell from the top of these steps.

Appellant alleges that the difference in lighting and the furnishing of the two rooms was such that she failed to observe the steps and f,ell. She brought suit against the appellee who was managing the hotel, charging negligence in permitting an inherently dangerous condition to exist by reason of the defective lighting of the lounge, and also alleging a violation of the [643]*643city ordinance which required handrails.1 The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, the appellee. Appellant appeals from the judgment upon the ground that prejudicial errors were committed in the introduction of evidence and in instructions to the jury.

The Spanish ballroom was separated from the women’s lounge by a partition in which there were doors, two of which were open at the time of the accident. The opening was about 12 feet wide, while the platform on the same level in front of the Spanish ballroom and outside the partition was about four feet wide and extended slightly beyond the doors. The steps extended continuously along the front of the platform and returned around the corner of the platform and extended along each end so that the steps turned back to and abutted upon the outside of the wall of the Spanish ballroom. If handrails were placed at the end of the steps they would be parallel to and attached to the outside wall of the Spanish ballroom. If, however, the steps on the ends of the platform were ignored, the handrail might have extended perpendicular to the wall of the Spanish ballroom, thus preventing the use of the steps at the end of the platform. Some of the architects testified that the handrails required by the ordinance should be placed along the wall of the Spanish ballroom, and some contended that they should be perpendicular thereto, all as indicated upon Exhibit 1, which was a floor plan of the Spanish ballroom and the women’s lounge.

The appellant had gone up the steps at the time she entered the Spanish ballroom. She had visited that room a number of times more than three years previously but, as she testified, she was completely oblivious tó the presence of the steps at the time of the accident, partly because her mind was preoccupied with the illness of her husband. She came out of the Spanish ballroom with the other guests, many of whom were congregated in the women’s lounge at the time she fell.

The appellee contends that the word “stairways” in the second paragraph of section 619 of the ordinance should be construed in conformity with the definition of stairway contained in the first sentence, namely, “stairways of more than three risers,” and upon that ground contends that the ordinance does not apply.

Appellee, however, does not press the view that the ordinance was inapplicable because he relies upon the proposition that the injury to the appellant was in no way related to the absence of the handrails if required by the ordinance. It is perfectly clear that handrails seven or eight feet from the place where the appellant fell would have been of no assistance to her in avoiding the accident. Her fall was caused by her failure to observe the fact that there was any stairway there at all, and the only purpose a handrail could have served in that situation would have been to have called her attention to the existence of a stairway. That of course is not the purpose of handrails.

The appellant complains that the trial court permitted a number of architects to testify for the appellee, over her objection that the question was one of law for the court, that in their opinion the ordinance as applied to the stairway in question would require the handrails to be placed in the women’s lounge, along the wall of the Spanish ballroom and parallel thereto, which would be perpendicular to the appellant’s line of progress as she approached the steps.

The judge, it should be stated, received this evidence in the first instance on the ground that at the time it was offered he was not prepared to determine the proper construction of the ordinance so that in any event the evidence was clearly tentative. If the appellant desired the court to interpret the ordinance, she should have proposed an instruction covering that subject. She did not do so. Under the circumstances, appellant cannot complain of this line of testimony. The objection was well taken, but the appellant is in no position to claim error in the ruling. She had asked her witness Wm. R. Grant, an architect, whether or not in his opinion the con[644]*644struction of.the stairway complied with the provisions of section 619, supra, of the city ordinance. He testified that it did not, because “it calls for any stairs leading to a place of public assemblage to have substantial hand rails on both sides of the stairs.” On cross-examination he stated that in his opinion the ordinance required the handrails to extend perpendicular to the walls and doors of the Spanish ballroom. There were in fact no handrails so that the evidence of Grant that the ordinance required handrails for the stairs in question was a pure question of law and necessarily involved the legal conclusion as to where the handrail should be located. The appellee sought to rebut this testimony, not by proving that handrails were used in the construction complained of, but by evidence that the handrails would be located according to the ordinance along the wall where they could not be seen or used by the appellant unless she turned squarely to the right or left, and descended the stairs parallel to the wall of the Spanish ballroom. The trial court instructed the jury on that subject as follows:

“It has been admitted before you that this was a place of public assembly, and that these were stairs or a stair; that there were no hand rail or rails. The ordinance required them. The failure to have and maintain hand rails at the sides of this stairway was negligence as a matter of law. * * *

“Under the evidence in this case one of the issues of fact for your determination is where under that ordinance, it was intended, in a stairway such as this, those hand rails should be placed. * * * The defendant was not only under the obligation of maintaining stair rails at the places intended by this ordinance. * * * You will next pass to the consideration of the question of whether the absence of hand rails * * * was or was not the proximate cause of her injury.”

The appellant did not object to these instructions which left the jury to say where the handrails should be located, but the appellee objected thereto as follows: “I had in mind also the question of the city ordinance, whether the Court puts that upon the jury to determine as a question of fact what the ordinance means, or whether the Court wishes to himself interpret the ordinance-and leave the jury to apply it to the fact[s].” The judge replied: “The meaning of that ordinance as applied to this stairway is for the jury’s determination as a question of fact.” To which the appellee excepted and the appellant did not.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 641, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclaughlin-v-hull-ca9-1937.