Murray v. Ralph D'Oench Co.

147 S.W.2d 623, 347 Mo. 365, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 14, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 623 (Murray v. Ralph D'Oench Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Ralph D'Oench Co., 147 S.W.2d 623, 347 Mo. 365, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 616 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for personal injuries, sustained as the result of a fall on a slick linoleum floor of a beauty parlor in a building under defendant's management. Plaintiff had a jury verdict for $10,000. From the judgment entered therein, defendant has appealed.

Defendant corporation was engaged in the building management business and had charge of renting, servicing and operating the building under a contract with the owner. The negligence charged and submitted was causing and permitting a dangerous and unsafe condition of the floor, failure to warn of the condition of the floor, and failing to remedy the condition of the floor. Defendant's answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Defendant contends that plaintiff failed to make a jury case and that the court erred in refusing its peremptory instruction, in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Therefore, we will review the evidence and consider it from the viewpoint most favorable to plaintiff.

All of the testimony about the occurrence was by plaintiff's witnesses. Plaintiff's own testimony was, as follows:

"On October 26, 1937, I had an appointment for 9 o'clock at the Schaedler Beauty Parlor. I was right on time, within one minute either before or after. I was familiar with the premises, of course. . . . As I entered the waiting room Miss Schaedler and Mrs. Collins were standing over very near the door of the entrance into the operating room (also called the "work room") and the first thing that Miss Schaedler said to me as I stepped in, she says, `Mrs. Murray, we are cleaning up a spot here,' and I said, `Yes, all right.' . . . I took off my coat and hat and . . . went into the operating room. . . . It (the damp spot) was a little to the left of the door leading into the operating room — not in the center. It was not right in front of the door. It was a little to the left as I went in, which would be on the east side, but there was plenty room on the other side for me to walk in. . . . I could see there was something there. I didn't see anything on it because I didn't look close enough. . . . I was there having my hair shampooed anywhere from five to ten minutes. . . . Some one said, `Mrs. Murray, you have a phone call.' I think it was Miss Schaedler. . . . I got up and turned a little around very near that door — the west end of that door, and took, I should say, perhaps just about two steps. It was very near. I fell immediately almost after I entered into this waiting room. . . . (Cross-examination) Q. Did she call your attention to the fact that she was cleaning up some spots? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. And when she called your attention to that fact did she point out to you where that was located? A. Yes, sir; she was standing right *Page 369 by it — right to the edge of it. Q. And you saw a wet spot there, did you? A. Well, I just glanced down. I thought it looked wet. Q. And you say it was about a foot and a half in diameter? A. I should say about that. It might have been a little wider. . . . Q. A little more than a foot from the door? A. Well, I didn't observe that so closely, but I know it was right behind a little place where they hang clothes there. (East from the offset in the wall, which made a vestibule or hallway between the two rooms.) . . . Q. Now, when Miss Schaedler pointed out the spot to you you walked into the work room and avoided that spot? A. Certainly. . . . Q. Did you observe (when called to the phone) whether or not it was still on the floor? A. I merely glanced as I always do — as anyone would normally — but I didn't notice anything. . . . Evidently I stepped two steps on the floor where it was clear because the minute I stepped on whatever it was, it was just like skating on ice and both my feet went in the air. Q. You don't know what you stepped on? A. No. . . . Q. Now, you say the light in the waiting room — was that dark in there? A. Yes, sir; it was very poor. . . . Q. You noticed the room was dark and dingy? A. Yes, sir. There were no windows there. Q. Now, the light as you entered the room, did that in any way interfere with your seeing the floor? A. Yes, sir; I think it would. I was in my own light coming out from the light room." (Plaintiff said there was "a muddy color, dark dirty" substance "mottled" over "about fifteen inches or more" of her dress after she fell.)

While plaintiff said that she never saw the janitor (employed by defendant) until after she fell, he testified that he "was just fixing to start to rub" to wipe up the spot in this hallway with his mop when plaintiff came in the waiting room; that she went by him into the work room; that she was called to answer the phone while he was mopping, that when she came through the doorway "walking kind of fast" he "told her to take it easy and look out, it was wet;" and that "she slowed down and walked across." He said he was "outside wringing out the mop" when plaintiff went back into the work room after this first call, and that plaintiff fell, when she came out again after he had mopped a second time, and left the beauty parlor. Plaintiff denied that she went to the phone more than once. However, the tenant (beauty parlor operator) said that she went to answer the phone twice before the time she fell. Her assistant, Mrs. Collins, also said that plaintiff answered the phone twice before she fell and that "Miss Schaedler helped Mrs. Murray to the phone the second time."

The janitor's account was that he had cleaned the beauty parlor soon after 8 o'clock that morning. "emptied the waste baskets, swept the floor and mopped" with clear water. He said that about the time he finished. Mrs. Collins came in and asked him to try to clean a stain on the linoleum floor. The linoleum had big black and white *Page 370 squares and some of the white squares in the hallway were stained with black streaks. Mrs. Collins got some cleaning powder out of a cabinet in the work room (she said it was "Dutch Cleanser") and "sprinkled it on the floor" just inside the door between the work room and the hallway. She sprinkled it over an area about a foot and a half square but not "very thick." He smeared the powder around and rubbed it with his mop. He then went out into the outside hallway of the building and wrung his mop in the wringer on his mop bucket and rinsed it. When he came back to try to dry it up, Miss Schaedler, the operator of the beauty parlor, came in and told him to "get out of there with that mop." It was about 9 o'clock and customers began to come in at that time. Plaintiff was the first customer to arrive. He said that he had intended to rub it again with a dry mop. He also said that in rubbing the powder around and mopping it the second time he covered the entire hallway, but "it didn't extend beyond that vestibule." He also said that when he left the floor "could have been damp but it wasn't wet . . . it was almost dry." He was in the outside hallway, after Miss Schaedler told him to leave, when he heard plaintiff fall and came back to help lift her. When he did so he saw heelmarks, about eighteen inches long, where she had slipped in the hallway at the place he had been mopping. He said that he had never seen the soap powder before, which Mrs. Collins used on the floor, and all of the evidence shows that he was furnished no cleaning powder and that his instructions were to mop all offices with only clear water.

Miss Schaedler's testimony was that the janitor was mopping the floor when she came in but she did not see any soap powder. She told him to stop mopping because she did not want him in there when the customers came in. Plaintiff (who was 72) had arrived about that time and Miss Schaedler said "Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 623, 347 Mo. 365, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-ralph-doench-co-mo-1941.