Orvis v. Peterson

27 N.W.2d 172, 238 Iowa 975, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 1947
DocketNo. 47104.
StatusPublished

This text of 27 N.W.2d 172 (Orvis v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orvis v. Peterson, 27 N.W.2d 172, 238 Iowa 975, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 431 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Hale, J.

Plaintiff was aged fifty-four, in good health, and weighed one hundred twenty-eight pounds. At the time of the injury she had been wearing bifocal glasses for eleven years and was wearing them at the time she fell. Her vision with them was good and not blurred.

Defendants owned a frame residence property that had *977 been converted into an apartment house, on the east side of Tenth Street, facing west, Des Moines, in which they resided on the first floor. There were two apartments on the second floor and plaintiff and her husband,- at the time of the accident, resided in the one apartment on the third floor.

In the building there is a porch from which entry was had to a glassed-in lobb3T. In the east wall of the lobby there are two doors. The south door opens into the Peterson residence through a room called the “office.” The door to the north opens into a hallway where the stair is located. This stair is the only access to the second and third floors. The hall in which it is located is just inside the north wall of the building. The stair between the first and second floors runs in an easterly direction and consists of eight treads of nine and one-half inches and nine risers of seven inches. At the top of this flight is a square landing about four-by-four feet. From this landing the second floor is reached by a flight of three similar steps to the south. Coming down from the second floor there is a railing on the left, above and below the landing. This landing is covered with a strip of tightly tacked carpeting, and the treads of the steps, above and below the landing, are equipped with flat eor-rugated-rubher mats or pads.

Plaintiff and her husband had been separated and during part of the time of their separation she had been a housekeeper at Spencer and came to Des Moines. With her granddaughter, Betty West, she called at defendants’ home on October 28th to rent an apartment. At that time she talked to both defendants and inspected and rented a second-floor apartment for $7 a week. During the occupancy of this second-floor apartment she and her husband were remarried and they continued to live there for three weeks, and then rented the third-floor apartment-of Mr. Peterson, in which apartment they were living at the time of the accident. Plaintiff testified that both when she rented the second-floor apartment and the third-floor apartment the defendant A. G. Peterson told her he retained control of the light in the lower stairway hall and would turn it on at night and that the tenants were not to operate it. To reach this third-floor apartment from the first floor one went up the staim *978 way above mentioned to tbe second floor and then to the end of the hall and up another flight to the third floor.

Plaintiff testified that after first moving into the building she went up and down the stairs three or four times a day but testified that she did not go out evenings before the accident.

The lower stair hallway on the first floor was lighted by a fifteen-watt bulb inserted in a pull-chain fixture on the south hall wall at the foot of the stairs. There is a similar light on the east wall at the head of the stairs higher than plaintiff’s head. Rays from this light reached the landing between the first and second floors and part of the upper three steps of the lower flight. She testified this upper light was seven or eight feet from her right rear.

According to plaintiff’s evidence, on December 22, 1944, she and her husband had their evening meal in their third-floor apartment. She decided to mail a small Christmas package at the post-office substation and she inquired of her husband as to the time and was told it was 7:30. She put on a fur coat, extending to just above the hemline of her skirt, above the knee. As she descended the upper steps of the stairway between the second and first floors she was carrying the package under her right arm and took hold of the handrail with her left hand. She was not hurrying, but was walking. She testified she could see the stairway she first went down, since the light was on. The landing was lighted by the light on the second floor. She could see the outlines of the first three steps of the lower flight, or what appeared to be the steps. On reaching the turning landing she took hold of the corner post with her left hand and had hold of this post when she fell. Her hold of this post at the southwest corner of the landing kept her very close to it. She testified that after she took the step she noticed that the light was not on and she lost her balance and fell from the edge of the landing down the stairs. She further testified that as she was going down the stairs she looked to see where she was going but it did not look to be just right as there was not much light; that she lost her balance because the landing appeared to be farther out than it was. There was a shadow and she intended to put her foot back of the edge of what appeared to be the landing, and if she had not stepped where the shadow *979 appeared she would not'bave fallen down; that she did not know it was a shadow and she did not see the shadow before she took the step, but she could see the outline of the steps, or what appeared to be the steps, and she fell from the edge of the landing. As she fell her hold of the corner post was broken and she fractured her hip as a result of the fall. Her husband had heard the noise and he and Mrs. Peterson carried her to a bench in the lobby but did not turn on the light. The foregoing is the substance of the statement of facts by plaintiff, which was not amended in any way by defendants. We have set out the facts at coiisiderable length, since the question before the court is whether the testimony introduced by the plaintiff is sufficient to warrant submission of the case to the jury.

I. The defendants assign as errors of the court in denying their motions: First, that plaintiff failed, as a matter of law, to show that the absence of the light in the lower hall had any causal connection with her fall, or that the shadow of which she complains would have been dispelled had said lower hall light been burning; and second, that the court erred in overruling the defendants’ motion for the reason that the undisputed evidence as a matter of law shows that plaintiff’s fall was a direct result of either an absence of lookout and attention on her part to see the edge of the landing from which she was stepping, and which was well lighted, or if she did look, her failure to see the edge of the step, which must have been obvious to her.

Defendants concede that plaintiff is able to cite authority to the effect that where a landlord, as a part of the rental agreement, undertakes to see that a certain light in a hall is turned on during the hours of darkness, and fails in that regard, such failure constitutes a ground of negligence. They further concede that the evidence favorable to plaintiff showed such an agreement. They argue in the first division that as a matter of law plaintiff has failed to show that the absence of the lower hall light had anything to do with her accident; in other words, that it was not shown that it was the proximate cause. Citing Buchanan v. Hurd Creamery Co., 215 Iowa 415, 246 N. W. 41; Hecht v. Des Moines Playground and Recreation Assn., 227 *980 Iowa 81, 287 N. W. 259.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 172, 238 Iowa 975, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orvis-v-peterson-iowa-1947.