Pollick ex rel. Pollick v. J. C. Penney Co.
This text of 473 P.2d 394 (Pollick ex rel. Pollick v. J. C. Penney Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Defendant J. C. Penney Company appeals from a jury verdict and judgment entered [406]*406thereon in favor of the plaintiff, Darren J. Pollick, who suffered injuries when he fell over a guardrail protecting a stair well in defendant’s Murray, Utah, store.
On the morning of May 5, 1964, John R. Pollick, along with his then three-year-old son, Darren, went into the defendant’s store, where he purchased a dress for his wife. He released Darren’s hand and his attention was otherwise occupied while he was signing the charge slip. Meanwhile, the child climbed upon the banister, and fell 11 feet to a display table on the floor below. He suffered a broken leg, shock and painful bruises.
The defendant’s attack upon the judgment which we have found controlling is that there is no basis shown upon which it could be found negligent in causing the child’s injury and thus be held responsible in damages. This conclusion is predicated upon our agreement with its argument that such a recovery can be had only if it is shown that the defendant caused the injury by some wilful or negligent wrongful act of commission or omission in violation of its duty to use ordinary and reasonable care under the circumstances for the safety of others,1 or as is sometimes otherwise stated: is guilty of some conduct which it should in the exercise of such reasonable care have foreseen would expose others tot an unreasonable risk of harm.2
The plaintiffs’ own statement in: their brief as to the basis upon which they endeavored to meet the foregoing requirement is:
Plaintiffs proceeded upon the theory [that] they were business invitees and' [that] defendant neglected to exercise-due care to make the premises reasonably safe for them by maintaining the aforementioned banister [guardrail] in a dangerous and unsafe condition. (Emphasis added.)
In analyzing the evidence to see if it provides a basis for the plaintiffs’ conclusion-stated in the emphasized language, they are entitled to have us consider the evidence- and whatever reasonable inferences can fairly be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to their contention.3
It is a fact of common knowledge that buildings having more than one floor have stairways upon which to move from one floor to another. This necessitates an opening in the floor into which there is an. inherent but plain-to-be-seen danger of falling down the stairs at one end or into the [407]*407stair well at the other. It is therefore essential that such a stairway and stair well have some sort of a guardrail or banister to safeguard against persons falling therein. In this instance there was such a banister or guardrail. It was described by the father:
Q. Now, Mr. Pollick, I’ve also drawn here a drawing which represented the bannister and have you examined and looked at that bannister, after the accident?
A. After the accident, yes.
Q. And will you describe it to the jury and what it looks like?
A. Looking at the bannister from a side view, it has a mop board, I would estimate from six inches to one foot high, with a lip at the top.
Q. Would that be such as we have indicated here?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you mind, Mr. Nebeker, if I write “mop board” on there? Right here, sir. And that’s approximately how high?
A. Six inches to a foot.
Q. Okay. Then what is it ?
A. From that point up it looks like some type of a solid form of either dry wall or plaster, something of that nature.
Q. Then what’s on top ?
A. There is a wood cap on top of the bannister itself, then on top of that is a wooden hand railing.
As appears from the foregoing it is not shown that there was anything out of the ordinary about the banister. The only things plaintiffs are able to suggest as to a dangerous condition are that the banister, instead of being 36 inches high, should have been higher; and that the top of the mop-board was about of an inch wide, so the boy could get his toe thereon and thus make it easier to climb over. But except for the fact that this accident occurred, there is no evidence that those or any other aspects of the banister or the mopboard were in any way at variance with the ordinary construction of such a protective guardrail or banister; nor that there was anything about them from which defendant should have realized that others would be exposed to an unreasonable risk of harm which would thus constitute a failure of defendant to comply with its duty to use reasonable care for the safety of its business invitees.4
It is indeed unfortunate that the little boy, while his father’s attention was diverted, followed the bent of little boys to climb on things and fell over the guardrail, [408]*408suffering the painful injuries. But the mere fact that such misfortune occurs does not necessarily mean that someone else must respond in damages.5 Inasmuch as we are unable to see in the evidence any basis upon which reasonable minds acting fairly thereon could conclude that there was anything about the construction or maintenance of the guardrail which constituted failure of defendant to observe reasonable care for the safety of others, there is no foundation for imposing liability on it. Consequently it is necessary that the judgment be vacated. It'is so ordered. Costs to defendant (appellant) .
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473 P.2d 394, 24 Utah 2d 405, 1970 Utah LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollick-ex-rel-pollick-v-j-c-penney-co-utah-1970.