Negra v. L. Lion & Sons Co.

227 P.2d 916, 102 Cal. App. 2d 453, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1951
DocketCiv. 7860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 227 P.2d 916 (Negra v. L. Lion & Sons Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Negra v. L. Lion & Sons Co., 227 P.2d 916, 102 Cal. App. 2d 453, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

Plaintiff and respondent, with her husband, is a resident of Los Banos. For about six years they had occupied a residence, the floor plan of which, so far as material here, may be described as follows: The living room was 13 x 21 feet. Near the southeasterly portion thereof a 4-foot open archway gave entrance to the dining room, which measured approximately 12 x 12 feet. Across the dining room French doors gave exit to a rear porch. Beneath the dining room there was a floor furnace, the metal grating over which formed part of the floor surface. The grating measured approximately 20 inches in the square. It was located 6 inches from the southerly portion of the open arch. Just prior to July 29, 1948, respondent had purchased carpeting for her home from defendant and appellant and on the morning of July 29th two of appellant’s employees arrived with the carpet, prepared to lay it in the living room and dining room and in a rear hall just south of the dining room. They first laid the carpet in the living room, and having completed that task they next moved into the dining room. In order to lay the carpet in the dining room it was necessary to remove the grating over the floor furnace, tack the carpet down around the hole, cut around the hole with a knife, then replace the grating so that its exterior edges would extend over the carpet immediately around the hole. The workmen informed respondent and her husband that the grating had to be taken off in order to lay the carpet and respondent testified that she knew the grate had been removed for that purpose. After the grate had been removed there was some talk about cleaning out the floor furnace while the grate was off, and some little time later the workmen called to respondent, saying that if she would “come and vacuum it, the floor furnace, that they were ready to put the grate back on again.” Respondent said that she immediately left her work, came into the dining room with the vacuum cleaner and vacuumed the lint out of the furnace cavity and then went back into the living room where she was engaged in putting that room in order. She further said that when she had finished cleaning around the floor furnace with the vacuum *456 cleaner she went back into the living room without looking around the dining room to see how far the work of laying the carpet had progressed. An interval of time, fixed by the testimony as 10 or 15 minutes or possibly longer, elapsed. It appears that in order to properly lay the carpet it was further necessary to remove from its hinges the door leading into the back hall. This was done by one of the men and he carried the door up approximately to the archway where he spoke to respondent, indicating his intention to place the door in the living room. As respondent said, “He said, ‘what shall I do with this door, shall I put it into the living room?’ ” Respondent, when spoken to, looked toward the workman .and saw him standing with the door in his arms, with one end approximately at the southerly frame of the arch and the rest extending diagonally into the dining room in such a position as to obscure from her view the rest of the dining room, including the point where the grate was off the floor furnace. Respondent, seeing him so standing with the door under his arm, told him not to bring it into the living room because she had cleaned up in there, but to put it on the back porch where it would be out of the way. She then described what happened as follows: “So he hesitated with the door, not knowing what to do with it, looking in different directions and so I saw that he wasn’t sure where the back porch was, so I said, ‘I will open the door for you,’ and I pointed toward my back doors and he still hesitated so I started forward and as I stepped forward he saw that I was trying to get across and he tried to clear a road for me to get through or something, when as I took that second step back, it wasn’t still clear, and as he cleared the view it was too late, I was going into the furnace then, by the time he cleared the view I was falling in. ’ ’ Again she said, “Because he looked toward the kitchen and around and I pointed toward the doors [the French doors to the back porch] and he still hesitated, so I says, ‘I will open them for you’ and then as I stepped forward and tried to get across, then he still hesitated and then I took a step to the left and as I took that step to the left he finally noticed that I was trying to get across there and he started moving that door, my leg—I was already taking that other step as the view cleared, my leg was going in there. And I still tried to grab for the door but it was too late.” She was asked if she looked where she was going and answered, “Well, I didn’t feel like I should because he said that they were ready to put that grate back when I got through vacuuming. . . . *457 Well, as I walked, all I could see was that door in front of me. ... I was looking at his face when he was talking to me and I was talking back at him. . . . Q. And you were not watching where you were walking, isn’t that correct? A. Why, no. . . . I wasn’t watching, naturally walking, that floor there was nothing to watch, it was a level floor. Q. . . . But a few minutes before you had seen the grille off, had you not ? A. But they said they were putting it back on and I took it for granted that it was back on. . . . Once they tell me that the grille is going to be put back immediately and I was in the room [the living room] about, at least 10 minutes, I just forgot it because I took it for granted that it was back on there. ... I don’t mean forget it, I just took it for granted that the grille was back on there, there was nothing to be thinking about. ’ ’ It further appears that the workmen, having moved into the dining room to lay the carpet there, had been working there for quite some time before respondent cleaned out the furnace opening. The evidence is quite conflicting as to just how far the work of laying the carpet had progressed, but it appears without conflict that the two men were still working there when the accident happened.

A jury returned a verdict in favor of respondent in the sum of $30,000 for the injury she received and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal was taken.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to establish any negligence on the part of appellant’s employees and that as a matter of law respondent herself was contributorily negligent. Appellant further contends that the damages awarded are not supported by the evidence and are grossly excessive. Finally, appellant contends that the court committed reversible error in overruling defendant’s objection to the method used in selecting a special venire which was ordered in when the regular panel had been exhausted.

In support of these contentions, appellant argues, first, that the removal of the grate was not in itself an act of negligence, since it was necessary and appropriate to the proper performance of the work of laying the carpet. This point is not, and we think could not he, controverted by respondent. Next, appellant says that since respondent knew the grate had been removed and the reason for its removal, she had full knowledge of the existence of this obvious danger to anyone walking across the floor in the vicinity of the opening and that no duty was cast upon them to warn her when she walked *458 toward that opening that the grate had not been replaced.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P.2d 916, 102 Cal. App. 2d 453, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/negra-v-l-lion-sons-co-calctapp-1951.