Otto v. Stork

159 N.W.2d 528, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 879
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 11, 1968
DocketNo. 52885
StatusPublished

This text of 159 N.W.2d 528 (Otto v. Stork) 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
Otto v. Stork, 159 N.W.2d 528, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 879 (iowa 1968).

Opinion

MASON, Justice.

This is a law action by an executor for damages by reason of the death of her husband, Christopher P. Otto. Irwin Stork, operator of the tavern in which decedent was fatally injured, is the only defendant a party to this appeal. The trial court sustained motions by other defendants for directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and plaintiff has not appealed from that ruling.

Decedent, 65 when he died, part owner of a ballroom in Carroll, went to defendant’s tavern in Breda the morning of September 11, 1964, while distributing dance bills advertising coming attractions at the ballroom. He had been distributing such posters about once a month since 1957 and had made similar trips to this tavern before and since defendant took over its operation July 1, 1963. It was decedent’s practice to leave with each poster two complimentary tickets good for any Saturday night dance of the month when the tickets were given.

Defendant maintained a bulletin board on which the ballroom posters and other bills on farm sales were posted as a service to his customers, with information each bill would reflect. This board was in the northeast rear corner of the tavern near a trap door opening to the basement. The trap door lid, of wood similar to the dark brown floor, forms part of the floor in that area when shut. The door, hinged to the floor at its west edge, is opened by lifting its east side to lean vertically against a pool table to the West. When thus raised, a space about three feet wide from the east tavern wall, six to seven feet long, is left open.

The bar in the tavern located along the east side runs north and south; the north end being about 10 feet from the trap door.

When defendant arrived at the tavern about 7:30 that morning the trap door was closed. When he later went to the basement he raised the door and placed a chair in front of the opening before proceeding down the stairs. Coming from the basement about 9:30 defendant saw decedent entering the tavern at the front, south door. Defendant went on to the back room to dispose of some refuse he brought from the basement, leaving the trap door open. When defendant re-entered the tavern decedent was still toward the front of the building. However, as defendant started behind the north end of the bar to serve a customer he crossed in front of Otto, still some distance away but coming toward him.

Defendant said he did not notice Otto again until he was behind the bar, heard the chair move and actually saw Mr. Otto rolling north into the opening. Defendant immediately went to Otto’s aid at the bottom of the stairs. Being unable to move him, he sought the help of two of the three customers in the tavern, called the firemen with oxygen, a nurse and the ambulance in which decedent was taken to Carroll.

I. Plaintiff alleged in Division I of her petition decedent was an invitee upon the premises, defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of decedent’s injury and death and in Division II that he was a licensee by invitation. Defendant in answer admitted operation of the tavern, decedent’s fall through the opening to the basement and his death from the injuries sustained ; alleged decedent’s negligence as the cause of his injury; denied the pleaded specifications of negligence and decedent’s status as an invitee or licensee by invitation and alleged he was a mere licensee upon the premises.

Although the evidence was in some dispute as to the general lighting condition in the tavern, this does not go to the question of decedent’s status while there. The facts bearing on defendant’s negligence were given by him and are undisputed. He admitted leaving the trap door open as he momentarily forgot it to wait on a customer. He also admitted that in crossing in front of Otto on his way to the back of the bar he said nothing to him.

[530]*530The court submitted to the jury the question whether decedent was a bare licensee, licensee by implied invitation or an invitee while on the premises. Defendant’s failure to keep his premises in reasonably safe condition and to warn decedent of their unsafe condition were among the specifications of negligence submitted to the jury.

II. The jury returned a defendant’s verdict and in answer to special interrogatories found decedent was a bare licensee. Following denial of plaintiff’s motion for new trial she has appealed. Her three assignments of error questioned the correctness of the court’s manner of submitting to the jury the question whether decedent was a bare licensee and the instruction on the duty owed such a licensee where a trap or pitfall is involved.

Plaintiff stresses the fact much of the evidence material to a determination of decedent’s status, like the evidence as to defendant’s negligence as previously noted, came from defendant and is undisputed. She contends the court should have determined decedent’s status on the premises as a matter of law and should not have permitted the jury to speculate as to whether he was an invitee, licensee by invitation or bare licensee.

Plaintiff further contends that even if we determine the court properly submitted the question to the jury, it nonetheless failed to properly point out the extent of duty a possessor of premises owes to a bare licensee where a trap or pitfall is involved. She argues the duty of care by defendant is then greater than that normally owed to a bare licensee.

Plaintiff made timely objection to the giving of instructions 10 and 11. The portion of instruction 10 to which she directs her attack told the jury:

“The occupier has no duty to keep his premises in a reasonably safe condition for a bare licensee save that of not injuring him willfully or wantonly and to use such reasonable and ordinary care as the circumstances demand after his presence on the premises and his peril are known to avoid injuring him, or if he knowingly permitted him to enter the premises where there were traps or pitfalls or other hidden dangers.” (Emphasis supplied.)

It is plaintiff’s position the jury could not have known from the emphasized portion of the instruction that under those circumstances the possessor of the premises was required to use due care toward decedent; the instruction permitted the jury to speculate on the duty owed a bare licensee where a trap or pitfall existed on the premises and the possessor knowingly permitted the licensee to enter thereon. She contends the jury should have been told that when a possessor knowingly permits a bare licensee to enter premises where there are traps, pitfalls or other hidden dangers, liability might arise; under those circumstances the law imposes a greater duty of care on the possessor than that normally owed to a bare licensee. Citing Mann v. Des Moines Ry. Co., 232 Iowa 1049, 7 N.W.2d 45; and Lattner v. Immaculate Conception Church, 255 Iowa 120, 121 N.W.2d 639.

Plaintiff objected to instruction 11 and interrogatory 1 for the reason they submitted to the jury decedent’s status as a bare licensee.

The cited cases do not help plaintiff under our view. Plaintiff combines her three assignments of error in argument with the same brief points since they raise almost identical propositions of law. Rule 344(b), Rules of Civil Procedure.

III.

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Related

Hassebroch v. Weaver Construction Company
67 N.W.2d 549 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1954)
Mineke v. Fox
126 N.W.2d 918 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1964)
Lattner v. Immaculate Conception Church
121 N.W.2d 639 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1963)
Frideres v. Lowden
17 N.W.2d 396 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1945)
Mann v. Des Moines Railway Co.
7 N.W.2d 45 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.W.2d 528, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otto-v-stork-iowa-1968.