Nahigian v. Belcher & Loomis Hardware Co.

18 A.2d 388, 66 R.I. 194, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 26, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 388 (Nahigian v. Belcher & Loomis Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nahigian v. Belcher & Loomis Hardware Co., 18 A.2d 388, 66 R.I. 194, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 21 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

*195 Flynn, C. J.

These are two actions of trespass on the case, brought respectively by Anna A. Nahigian and Avedice H. Nahigian, her husband, to recover damages caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant in making repairs to a household electric ironer. Both cases were tried together before a jury in the superior court and, at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ evidence, the trial justice granted a nonsuit of the plaintiff in each case. They are before us solely on the plaintiff’s exceptions to these rulings. Since the case of the husband is based upon his wife’s right to recover in her own action for personal injuries, we shall consider the exceptions as if only the wife’s case was before us.

The declaration was in one count and relied upon a specific charge of negligence. It alleged the purchase of the ironer from the defendant by plaintiff’s husband; described generally the construction of some parts essential to its usual operation; and the repair by defendant on several stated occasions of certain pulleys, lines, fasteners and instrumentalities which held in place an iron shoe and prevented it from falling against the roller of said ironer when not in use. It further alleged that, it was the duty of the defendant “to then and there use due care in making or attempting to make the repairs aforesaid, so that the said ironer should not thereafter again break down and the said shoe fall down to and against the said roller on the hands of an operator of said ironer and cause injury to the same, through the negligence of the said defendant in making the repairs aforesaid.”

*196 It then charged a breach of that duty in that the defendant “then and there negligently and carelessly repaired and fixed said ironer in such a way that said shoe was liable to fall down because of not being sufficiently held in place for the reasons above set forth.” Other allegations followed as to the defendant’s knowledge or reasonable opportunity to know that the shoe as repaired was thereafter liable to fall down and cause injury'to the hands of an operator thereof and that it did so fall upon the plaintiff’s hands, burning them and causing the injuries and damage complained of.

At the trial, no question as to the privity of contract between the defendant and the plaintiff was raised by the defendant. Further, the latter admitted in the transcript “that there were repairs made upon the machine” or ironer by defendant’s agent on July 7, 1934, August 16, 1934 and December 3, 1934.

The evidence also showed that the ironer was purchased on March 2, 1934; that the last repair was made on December 3, 1934; that thereafter the ironer had worked perfectly and had been used regularly by the plaintiff until April 23, 1935, the date of the accident. There was other evidence tending to show that the repairs made were necessitated largely because the iron shoe dropped automatically upon the roller as soon as the electric cord was plugged in a wall socket.

On the date of the accident, however, the plaintiff testified that she had plugged the cord in the wall socket and had allowed the iron shoe to be heated for some time, during which said shoe remained suspended above the roller; that, having the machine in front óf her, she sat down and was smoothing the edges of a heavy towel on the roller, preparatory to beginning the operation of the ironer; that the lever, by which the iron shoe was let down and raised, could be operated by her knee or hand; but that, without any such intervention, or negligence on her part, said heated shoe *197 automatically dropped upon the roller, catching and burning her hands.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict. The trial justice, however, refused to grant such motion, but he did grant a nonsuit of the plaintiff substantially on the grounds, first, that the evidence did not show that defendant’s negligence was the cause of the injury as alleged; and second, that the interval between the last repair and the time of the accident, during which the ironer had worked perfectly, made it unreasonable, as a matter of law, to charge the defendant with negligence as alleged.

We have considered the evidence most favorably-to the plaintiff’s case and we are of the opinion that the trial justice was not in error in ordering a nonsuit. If we assume that the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the interval of time between the alleged last repair and the accident presented a question of fact for determination by the jury rather than by the trial justice, as plaintiff strongly contends, we nevertheless must sustain the trial justice’s ruling upon the other ground.

There was no evidence tending to show the particular nature of the repairs made by the defendant on any of the stated dates; nor is there any tending to show that the repairs on December 3, 1934 were made to the same part or parts which were repaired on either of the previous occasions. Furthermore, there is no evidence tending to show that the defendant’s negligence, if any, in making any of the stated repairs, was the proximate cause of the injury. For all that is shown by the evidence in the transcript, the electrically-heated iron shoe may as well have fallen from some other cause, or because of some defect which never before needed any repair and was never actually repaired by the defendant, and for which the defendant would not be liable in contemplation of this declaration.

*198 A plaintiff, relying upon a specific allegation of negligence in making certain repairs, has the burden of establishing that the defendant was negligent in making the alleged repairs and also that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. Conceding that proof by circumstantial evidence is admissible to discharge that burden, the resulting inferences must be based on other proven facts. A plaintiff may not rely upon mere conjecture to establish any of the essential elements of the allegations upon which he relied. See Ziegler v. Providence Biltmore Hotel Co., 59 R. I. 326; Misch v. Montgomery, 61 R. I. 345, 353; Sullivan v. Wakefield Water Co., 65 R. I. 335, 15 A. 2d. 23. In our opinion the evidence in the instant case fails to show that the, alleged negligence of the defendant in making repairs was the proximate cause of the injury. It therefore comes within the law stated in the above-cited cases.

The plaintiff, however, substantially contends that the automatic fall of the iron shoe upon the roller in these circumstances constituted in itself prima jade evidence of the defendant’s negligence. She concedes that neither the pleadings nor evidence set forth a case that justifies the application of the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. But she strongly contends for the application of an extension or modification of that doctrine to this type of case and, in support thereof, relies chiefly upon Petrarca v. Quidnick Mfg. Co., 27 R. I. 265, Minutilla v. Providence Ice Cream Co., 50 R. I. 43, Doughnut Machine Corp. v. Bibbey, 65 Fed. 2d. 634, and cases in Massachusetts of which

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 388, 66 R.I. 194, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nahigian-v-belcher-loomis-hardware-co-ri-1941.