Pauline Early v. John A. Cooper Company, Successor to Cherokee Village Development Company, Inc.

435 F.2d 342, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 6070
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1970
Docket20134_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 435 F.2d 342 (Pauline Early v. John A. Cooper Company, Successor to Cherokee Village Development Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pauline Early v. John A. Cooper Company, Successor to Cherokee Village Development Company, Inc., 435 F.2d 342, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 6070 (8th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

VAN PELT, Senior District Judge.

This is a negligence case. Plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries sustained from a fall in a bath tub on July 18,1966, while an invited guest of defendant. A jury was waived and trial was had to the court. Upon dismissal of plaintiff’s claims, 1 a motion for new trial was filed with the additional request for permission to request a jury. This was denied and this appeal follows. We affirm.

The facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff and her party were invited guests in one of defendant’s guest facilities at Bella Vista Village, a massive land development and resort area near Bentonville, Arkansas. 2 The day following the party’s arrival, plaintiff arose to take a shower bath. 3 She found a bathmat draped over the side of the metal bathtub door frame. The mat was manufactured by Rubbermaid and had rows of suction cups alternated with rows of holes designed to release air which might otherwise be trapped under the mal. The top side of the mat was textured with small rubber edges. 4

Plaintiff did not look for instructions as to placing the mat in the tub. None were posted, however. Instructions furnished by Rubbermaid with the mat were in evidence. They are on a separate printed sheet. They provide among other things that the mat be placed in the tub before running the bath water and that each end of the mat be pressed down.

Printed on the mat on the suction cup side were the words “This side down.” *344 Plaintiff testified that she read these instructions and “I put ‘This side down’ in the tub. I did just what the instructions said.” She first turned on the water. The water was running at the time she laid the mat into the tub.

With her back to the shower nozzle she stepped over into the tub with her right foot, with most of her weight on the mal. When she put her full weight onto the bathmat she took her weight off her left foot. Her left leg at the time was over the edge of the bathtub and “when I put my full weight on my right foot I shot down the tub.”

“Q. You say you shot down the tub. . Did the bath mat move ?
A. The bath mat carried me down the tub.
Q. Did this happen quickly or slowly?
A. Very quickly.”

When this happened she said her left leg was caught on the tub in the aluminum track and was pulled out of joint at the knee and was cut and scraped underneath and over the top.

She screamed and her husband who was about two steps away stepped into the bathroom and caught her, preventing her falling into the tub.

Plaintiff was forty-two years old at the time of the fall. She had been married three times and had traveled extensively. She testified she possessed no prior experience with bathmats 5 although she believed she knew how to use them properly.

Plaintiff called as an expert an associate professor who is a mechanical engineer with a Ph.D. in engineering materials, and who examined a rubber mat labelled model number CDO-0450/9.

The bathmat used by plaintiff bears model number DO/0450. The expert testified that the mat operates through action of the suction cups; that when he placed the mat in a tub and pressed down on the suction cups it seemed to have excellent holding power; when placed in water without any force downward it rather easily slips along the surface. If directions are followed the mat appears safe. 6

During cross-examination an experiment with a mat in water was conducted and the attorney pushing on the mat in water with his hand was unable to scoot the mat laterally or sideways. The witness stated if none of the cups were in operation, it would slip almost as if it were greased.

Defendant’s testimony was that mats very similar to the Bella Vista mats are used in other commercial hotels and motels; that no other complaints as to use or falling have been made to Bella Vista. Another witness testified to selling Rubbermaid mats at retail. He sold to defendant mats similar to the mat here involved. He testified that he had never seen printed instructions as to how to use them. On cross-examination he was then handed a cellophane sealed package of the kind his store was selling and on opening it was shown to contain a mat and printed instructions as to use.

Another witness testified that on getting into a shower she would step in with the left foot and that the Bella Vista people have had no other bathmat accidents.

*345 Mrs. Early’s prior deposition was introduced. It stated she put the mat in the tub without really looking at it and was confident she knew how to use it. She didn’t remember any writing on the back of it. A statement she made about how she would use her bathmat at home she said was a misstatement.

The trial court found the bathmat not a dangerous chattel and further found:

“An examination of the instructions normally provided with bathmats sold by the same manufacturer reveals that the manner in which plaintiff used the subject bathmat differs in one material respect from the recommended procedure. Plaintiff turned on the shower water before placing the bathmat in the tub, whereas the manufacturer advises that the mat be placed in the tub before turning on the water. The difference is significant, because persons of ordinary intelligence know as a matter of common experience that suction cups function far more effectively when compressed on a relatively dry surface. Any person who has ever taken a-bath is aware that air becomes trapped under almost any surface that is placed on top of water. A person of ordinary prudence would not only place the mat in a dry or empty tub, but would thereafter also attempt to shove or otherwise move the mat before committing total body weight to it.
“Plaintiff claims, however, that she possesses absolutely no prior experience with bathmats. Her discovery deposition, introduced for the purpose of impeachment, leads the court to believe otherwise. Plaintiff was forty-two years old at the time of the accident, and had traveled widely and often with her parents and with three husbands. Although she denies frequent patronage of hotels and motels, she admits that she has occasionally stayed in such establishments. It would in fact be virtually impossible for one even half the age of plaintiff to have entirely avoided the use of public accommodations. However, even if plaintiff had never visited a hotel or motel, the contention that a woman of her experience had reached a mature age without coming in contact with a bathmat would be astounding if not incredible.
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Bluebook (online)
435 F.2d 342, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 6070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pauline-early-v-john-a-cooper-company-successor-to-cherokee-village-ca8-1970.