Pitts v. Basile

204 N.E.2d 43, 55 Ill. App. 2d 37, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 626
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 13, 1965
DocketGen. 49,299
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 N.E.2d 43 (Pitts v. Basile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitts v. Basile, 204 N.E.2d 43, 55 Ill. App. 2d 37, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 626 (Ill. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DRUCKER

delivered the opinion of the court.

A verdict and judgment for $50,000 were entered in this negligence action against all defendants after a jury trial. The motion of Ambrose Maiers, d/b/a Pacific Toy House (hereinafter referred to as defendant), for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was allowed and plaintiff filed this appeal. Defendants Basile and Inzerillo, joint owners of the IGA Store, did not file post-trial motions and are not involved in the instant appeal.

On September 14, 1954, Lonnie Phillips, eight years old, went to the IGA Store at Newland and Grand Avenues in Chicago to obtain some darts. 1 He testified:

When I went into the store to get the dart, the dart was too high for me to reach. There was a man standing next to me. He walked up to me and said, “Can I help you?” I said, “I’d like that package up there.” So, he took them down and asked if I had any money. I said, yes, and gave him twenty cents. He handed me the darts. . . .
There were no instructions as to the use of the dart contained in the package or anywhere connected with the package or on the dart.

The following day at about 5:00 p. m. the eight-year-old was throwing the darts toward the garage behind his home. Phillips acknowledged that one dart “rolled off my hand and struck Dale Pitts in the eye. He was about 5 to 10 feet off of my right hand at that time.” Dale Pitts, aged six, said that just prior to the incident somebody had exclaimed, “Look out”; that he turned around and that the next thing he knew he was hit in the left eye by a dart. The damage to plaintiff’s eye was described in his testimony and that of his physician, Dr. James Walsh. Dale Pitts claimed that he could perceive occasional light and darkness with his left eye; that he sometimes felt “a little pain in my left eye” after reading one to two hours.

Dr. Walsh stated that a cataract formed over the eye; that the eye had turned or crossed about 30 degrees; that the eye was out of focus; and that plaintiff was unable to use the central vision of his injured eye. The doctor opined that “this condition is permanent and directly related to the initial injury to the eye as a result of the dart penetration.”

Defendant supplied the IGA Store with the packaged darts. He referred to his enterprise as that of “rack distributors . . . primarily a service operation whereby we take specific items and display them in a store for sale to the public.” In 1954 the darts were “packaged in cellophane bags with a header attached to them so that they could be hung on hooks for display.” Defendant further testified that the package, labeled “KIDDY TOY-PAK,” was “something for a child, as a toy” and that such a rack display might prompt “impulse sales.” On cross-examination he stated that prior to September 15, 1954, he did not instruct his salesmen “to warn or instruct the dealers or retailers not to sell this dart or darts to children.”

Salvatore Inzerillo testified that his store stocked dart packages labelled “KIDDY TOY-PAK” in addition to 60 other items 2 supplied by defendant. He denied selling darts to Lonnie Phillips and Dale Pitts. His partner Basile “had nothing to do with the sale of darts.” The cashier at the store on or about September 15, 1954, could not remember selling darts to Lonnie Phillips, or for that matter, selling any packaged darts whatsoever.

Plaintiff’s appeal postulates the theory that the evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, demonstrated that defendant was guilty of actionable negligence towards the plaintiff and that the judgment notwithstanding the verdict should not have been granted. He argues:

1. That the supplier of toys, specifically designed and oriented to children, owed a duty (a) to exercise reasonable care in supplying toys which could be safely used by children for their designated purpose, or (b) to supply adequate warning as to the danger attending their indicated use.

2. That there was sufficient evidence to support a finding that defendant violated such duty.

3. That the issues on review of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict are whether there is a cause of action stated and whether there is any evidence tending to support the jury’s verdict for the plaintiff, and that plaintiff has met both issues.

Defendant contended that he was not liable to a person with whom he was not in privity of contract because the dart was neither defective nor inherently dangerous. In the alternative defendant advanced the argument that his sale of the darts to the IGA Store was not the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff relies on Kahn v. James Burton Co., 5 Ill 2d 614, at page 622, 126 NE2d 836:

Every person owes to all others a duty to exercise ordinary care to guard against injury which may naturally flow as a reasonably probable and foreseeable consequence of his act, and the law is presumed to furnish a remedy for the redress of every wrong. The duty to exercise ordinary care to avoid injury to another does not depend upon contract, privity of interest, or the proximity of relationship, but extends to remote and unknown persons. (Wintersteen v. National Cooperage and Woodenware Co., 361 Ill 95.) The test in the case at bar is whether the lumber company in the exercise of ordinary care could reasonably have anticipated the likelihood that children would climb onto the lumber and would be injured if it were not securely piled.

In that case a lumber company was the supplier; it neither owned nor controlled the land on which it piled an order of lumber. The court said these factors did not absolve the supplier from liability for the consequences of its own negligence.

The dart need not be classified as a dangerous instrumentality in order to hold the defendant liable. Smith v. Springman Lumber Co., 41 Ill App2d 403, 191 NE2d 256. In Smith plaintiff-minor lived with his family in a dwelling owned by defendant. A fuel tank which was no longer in use was situated next to a tree on defendant’s premises; it rested on concrete blocks, was old and rusty but without physical defects. Plaintiff “. . . while standing on the tank or attempting to climb into the tree slipped and fell to the ground causing injury . . .” One of defendant’s contentions in that case was that common instrumentalities in common use were not in themselves dangerous objects. The court did not ascertain whether the tank itself was a dangerous instrumentality. It predicated its opinion concerning the liability on Kahn, asserting that the test is “the foreseeability of harm to the child. . . . [which] were matters for the determination of the jury.” The court enumerated factors which justified the jury’s verdict for plaintiff. These considerations were: defendant’s knowledge of the children playing on the tank, the probability of their injury, their tender years, their incapability of appreciating the risk involved, and finally, the small cost involved in remedying the danger.

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204 N.E.2d 43, 55 Ill. App. 2d 37, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitts-v-basile-illappct-1965.