O'Brien v. Smith Bros. Engine Rebuilders, Inc.

494 S.W.2d 787, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 13, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 494 S.W.2d 787 (O'Brien v. Smith Bros. Engine Rebuilders, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Brien v. Smith Bros. Engine Rebuilders, Inc., 494 S.W.2d 787, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

NEARN, Judge,

^ ⅛ & (⅛⅛ ^ ⅛11„ case.

The jury returned a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor in the amount of $12,000.00. The defendant has appealed.

Seven Assignments of Error have been filed in this Court. Five of these Assignments raise but a single issue and that is whether or not the Trial Judge should have granted the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s proof. The two remaining Assignments of Error are addressed to the Court’s charge to the jury.

The substance of the argument made by counsel for appellant on the first issue is the motion for a directed verdict should have been granted because the proof establishes as a matter of law: (a) plaintiff was a licensee which fact, under the pleadings, would preclude recovery, (b) the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, (c) the plaintiff assumed the risk and (d) there is no evidence to support the verdict.

Our determination of the first issue is governed by the rule that in the review of the action of a Trial Court on a motion for a directed verdict, we must consider all the evidence, take the plaintiff’s evidence as true, discard all countervailing evidence, take the strongest legitimate view of the plaintiff’s evidence and draw all reasonable inferences therefrom in plaintiff’s favor. If, after having done so, there is any material determinative evidence, or any doubt as to conclusions to be drawn from the whole evidence, the matter should have been submitted to the jury and the motion denied. Newark Insurance Company v. Seyfert (1964 M.S.) 54 Tenn.App. 459, 392 S.W.2d 336. An adherence to the rule is rendered less difficult in this case as the defendant elected to put on no proof and stood on the motion for a directed verdict.

The plaintiff is a man fifty-one years of age, partially blind and has been so most *790 all of his life. Previous to the day of the injury, plaintiff had been an employee of the defendant, but was not an employee at the time of the injury. Plaintiff had worked for defendant about four or five months in 1962 as an operator of, what is termed in the record, a “Dynamaster” machine. The business of the defendant is automobile engine rebuilding, the sale of rebuilt engines, the sale of new and used auto parts and the purchase of junk cars in order to cannibalize the wreck for parts for reconditioning and resale.

On the morning of the day of the injury plaintiff went to defendant’s place of business to inquire of the owner if he had a head for a Cadillac engine. Plaintiff was repairing a Cadillac engine and believed one of the engine heads to be cracked and needed another. Mr. Smith, the owner of the defendant corporation, advised plaintiff that he did not have a reconditioned Cadillac head on hand but to come back late in the afternoon as he might have one available at that time.

The defendant’s business functions are carried on in a Quonset type building. An aisle runs down the middle of the building, passes between engine storage and work areas and continues to the rear of the building where the parts department and an office are located as well as the rear door to the junkyard. To the right, as you come in the front door is the engine rebuilding department and next to it, on the same side of the building, is the Dynamas-ter machine. The Dynamaster is a machine used to check a rebuilt engine block for balance, knocks, etc. If the engine fails the Dynamaster test, it is wheeled on a table with casters back to the engine rebuilding department for further work. In the process of checking the engine on the Dy-namaster machine, about one quart of oil is placed in the engine, which oil because of the incomplete assembly of the engine, assisted by the force of gravity, leaks out and is allowed to drain upon the floor. A product known as “Oil-Dry” is supposed to be placed on the floor by the defendant’s employees whenever oil is spilt. “Oil-Dry” is a clay-like substance which absorbs oil and is thrown or sprinkled on the area of oil and allowed to remain on the floor until the accumulation is too great and becomes too crusty to walk on, then it is scraped off the floor and the process starts all over again. Engines do not often fail the Dy-namaster test, but when they do, they are returned to the engine rebuilding department for additional work, where oil drains out of them onto the floor.

When plaintiff returned about S :00 p. m. to see if Mr. Smith had found the Cadillac engine head, plaintiff entered through the front door and went about fifteen feet over to Mr. Leek, the engine rebuilder, to inquire if Mr. Smith was there and if the head was ready. As it happened, Mr. Smith was out and plaintiff talked in general with Mr. Leek for some few minutes. While conversing with Mr. Leek, plaintiff was standing next to an engine that was on a caster wheel table. When plaintiff turned to leave, he slipped in a puddle of oil, fell and in the process of falling struck the bottom portion of the table upon which an engine rested. This caused the engine to fall from the table upon the plaintiff’s knee. The engine weighs between two hundred and three hundred pounds. The plaintiff suffered serious injuries.

It was plaintiff’s contention that under the circumstances he was an invitee to the premises and the defendant breached that duty of reasonable care owed to an invitee.

It was the position of the defendant that plaintiff was a licensee in regard to the portion of the building where the injury occurred and defendant’s duty was therefore only not to intentionally harm plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified that it was not unusual for customers to come to the engine repairing department to watch an engine being rebuilt. Further, that customers usually did business with Mr. Smith wherever they could find him about the premises.

*791 Mr. Leek, the engine rebuilder, testified that customers came into the engine rebuilding area of the building whenever they wanted to. Sometimes they came in to watch an engine being rebuilt, and on other occasions, since he was the first one a customer would see upon entering the building, customers would come to him to inquire of Mr. Smith’s whereabouts or for directions to get to various other departments of the building.

In light of the foregoing proof, reviewed in a manner most favorable to the plaintiff, we find it impossible to follow the urgings of counsel for appellant and say that as a matter of law the plaintiff was not an invitee, but was in fact a licensee and reasonable minds could not differ on the point. Under these facts the jury could, as they did, find that the plaintiff was an invitee. The duty of the owner to the invitee is not limited to a specific area, but extends to such other parts of the premises as may be reasonably expected to be visited by the invitee in the course of the visit. Hatcher v. Cantrell (1933 M.S.) 16 Tenn.App. 544, 65 S.W.2d 247. To determine what is “reasonable” or “reasonably expected” under a given set of circumstances is one of the main functions of a jury. The Trial Judge, under proper instructions, submitted to the jury the question of whether, under the circumstances, the plaintiff was an invitee or licensee, and we find no error in that action.

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Bluebook (online)
494 S.W.2d 787, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-smith-bros-engine-rebuilders-inc-tennctapp-1973.