Marvin Fain v. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, Incorporated
This text of 228 F.2d 508 (Marvin Fain v. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The suit was for damages for personal injuries received by plaintiff when he tripped over the handle of a hydraulic jack which was then being used by defendant’s employees in raising plaintiff’s car in order to do a balancing job on the wheels.
The claim was that, though the jack was equipped with a safety device which' permitted the handle to be raised two to two and one-half feet above the floor, defendant negligently left it protruding at, or slightly above, floor level for about three or four feet into the open space west of the car, and that plaintiff, in walking toward a water cooler which was located in a westerly direction from the car, caught his toe under the jack handle and tripped and fell, sustaining serious injuries.
The defenses were: a denial that defendant was negligent; and affirmative defenses, (1) that the defendant was not, and the plaintiff was, negligent, and his negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, (2) that, if defendant was negligent, plaintiff was contributorily negligent, and (3) that the happening was an unavoidable accident.
The cause was tried to a jury on these issues, and, when plaintiff had offered his evidence 1 and rested, the defendant *510 moved 2 for an instructed verdict. Whereupon the court querying: “In what manner has the plaintiff raised an issue of fact in this case?”, and argument following, the court stated, “I am going to overrule the motion at this time and let the defendant put on his case, but I will say it is my present opinion that the plaintiff has wholly failed to make a casé.”
Thereafter the defendant, without putting on any evidence, rested and renewed his motion, and the court instructed a verdict for defendant and entered judgment accordingly.
Plaintiff is here claiming under three specifications of error that the court erred in directing the verdict and in entering judgment for defendant without sending the case to the jury, and that the judgment must, therefore, be reversed.
In support of its contention, appellant relies on the well supported general principle that the issues in a negligence cáse must be sent to the jury unless the testimony is such that reasonable minds could reach only one conclusion thereon. In addition he meets head on the counter contention of appellee that this case is controlled by the decisions dealing with the law of “open and obvious” conditions. He does this by citing many cases 3 and specifically by seeking to bring this case within the “aisle” cases in which this and other courts have held that a case for a jury is made out where persons are injured by tripping or falling over obstructions in “aisles” kept and maintained in stores as passageways for employees and customers. Finally, he cites and relies on a jackhandle case, Kolb v. Isenberg, 150 Pa.Super. 482, 28 A.2d 729.
Appellee points out that under the undisputed evidence the injury occurred not in an aisle of a store but on the *511 floor of a garage or work room where automobiles were brought to be jacked up and worked on. In addition it points to these controlling facts testified to by plaintiff: (1) that he had himself placed the car; (2) that he had watched the jack being put under the car and its being raised thereby; and (3) that he had, in a moment of inadvertence and forgetfulness, knowing but not keeping in mind that the jack was there, stumbled over it and fallen.
Upon these undisputed facts, appellee insists, and we agree, that under the law of Texas, as laid down in Robert E. McKee, General Contractor v. Patterson, Tex., 271 S.W.2d 391, 393, 4 and the numerous cases it cites, and in cases from this court, 5 the evidence did not raise a fact issue for the jury.
Fain testified: that he knew that the jack had a handle on it, indeed that he was familiar, from having previously worked in a garage, with the type of jack being uked; and that he knew that the jack was under his car as he was standing only two or three feet from where the employee was working with it.
Since the use of the jack and its position was as well known to Fain as to the defendant, the defendant owed no duty to him to advise or warn him as to a condition which was open and obvious, and of which he admittedly knew, and it was not negligence for not having done so.
To appellant’s jackhandle case, Kolb v. Isenberg, supra, appellant opposes O’Hanley v. Norwood, 315 Mass. 440, 53 N.E.2d 3, another jackhandle case where liability was denied, and in addition points out, as conclusively distinguishing the cases, that in the Kolb case the jack was being used on a public street as darkness fell and not, as here, in a well lighted store, and that there a pedestrian, knowing nothing about the jack’s being there, fell over it, *512 while here plaintiff knew everything about, indeed was the cause of, the jack’s being used. Finally, citing the Balfanz and other cases, appellee insists that even if the issue of negligence was for the jury, the evidence establishes as matter of law that Fain was contributorily negligent and may not recover.
If the evidence in this case does not require an instructed verdict, both on the ground that evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant was wholly lacking and that plaintiff’s own negligence was the proximate cause of his injuries, it would be difficult, we think, to find one in the books.
The district judge was right in instructing a verdict. His judgment is affirmed.
. The evidence was in substance this:
Fain had driven his automobile into the Goodyear Store in the City of Denton, Texas, to have the wheels balanced. He drove the car into the store and headed it in a southerly direction with the front end adjacent to an open space in the store. The car was placed in this position as desired by Goodyear’s employee in order that he might perform the necessary work to balance the wheels.
In addition to an area provided in said store for balancing the wheels on automobiles, Goodyear had displayed for sale various other merchandise including appliances. These appliances were in front of or to the south of the automobile belonging to Fain and between Fain’s car and the row of appliances was a space approximately five feet wide. It was in this space that the accident occurred which injured Fain. Goodyear’s employee pulled the jack and placed it under the front end of said ear and raised the front of the car but left the handle of the jack protruding about three or four feet into said space.
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228 F.2d 508, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marvin-fain-v-the-goodyear-tire-and-rubber-company-incorporated-ca5-1956.