Powell v. Vracin

310 P.2d 27, 150 Cal. App. 2d 454, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1957
DocketCiv. 21986
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 310 P.2d 27 (Powell v. Vracin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Vracin, 310 P.2d 27, 150 Cal. App. 2d 454, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by defendants from a judgment for plaintiff entered on a jury verdict in an action for damages for personal injuries.

On October 29, 1953, in the daytime plaintiff fell as she was going out of defendants’ house where she was working as a baby sitter.

We shall, in accordance with the rule, state the evidence most favorable to the prevailing party—plaintiff. In defendants’ house there was an opening in an outer wall of the dining room leading outside the house. The opening was to be a door eventually. It was filled temporarily with two sliding glass panels and outside those, two sliding screens. The floor level at the opening was about 20 inches higher than the ground level outside. There were no steps from the house to the ground. The ground immediately outside the opening was “real slick,” hard, and sloped away from the house. Defendants knew the conditions.

*456 Defendants had several children. Pour of them, ranging in age from 2% to 6 years, were at home the day of the accident. Defendants were not at home and plaintiff was in charge of the children. Plaintiff was in the kitchen. “Hucky,” 3% years old, came into the kitchen with a sharp piece of metal. Plaintiff reached for the metal; Hucky jerked, dodged, and ran out of the house into the yard. Plaintiff called to him and in about two minutes he came back through the glass sliding doors without the metal. Andrew, 2% years old, was playing in the yard at the time. Pearful that Hucky would get the metal again or that Andrew would get it, plaintiff hurried to the glass sliding door to go to the yard to find the metal before the children got it. She went “out through the glass door, because that was the way he came in and that was the shortest way to the metal.” She walked to the door, took hold of the handle, and stepped down. As she stepped down she fell and fractured her left ankle.

Defendants first claim plaintiff failed to prove negligence and that she was guilty of negligence as a matter of law. It is argued that the conditions were open and obvious; any danger was open and known to plaintiff; and there was no duty on defendants to warn of danger she already knew.

Generally the owner of property is under a duty to keep in safe condition all parts of premises over which he has control. (Austin v. Riverside Portland Cement Co., 44 Cal.2d 225, 233 [282 P.2d 69].) An invitee is one who goes on the premises of another at the other’s invitation, express or implied, and whose presence there is to their mutual interests. (Boucher v. American Bridge Co., 95 Cal.App.2d 659, 667 [213 P.2d 537].) The evidence is uneontradicted that plaintiff was on defendants’ premises at their express invitation and to their mutual interests—she was on the premises as an invitee. An owner is required to exercise ordinary care to render his premises reasonably safe for use by invitees thereon. (Woodard v. Bank of America, 130 Cal.App.2d 849, 853 [279 P.2d 1018]; Bale v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 129 Cal.App.2d 124, 128 [276 P.2d 118].)

In Rafferty v. City of Marysville, 207 Cal. 657 [280 P. 118], the plaintiff fell in stepping from the sidewalk to the gutter, a distance of 15 inches, and was injured. A judgment for the plaintiff was upheld, the court saying (p. 660) :

“Negligence is relative to the time, place and circumstances which bear upon the particular acts under investigation. Bach case must depend upon its own state of facts, and so varying *457 are the factors which contribute to produce a result that no hard-and-fast rule may find practical application in the great majority of cases. . . .
“[P. 663.] No case has been cited where the distance of the tread from sidewalk to street or from tread to tread in any kind of traffic lane was as great as fifteen inches. . . .
“We think we may well take notice of the fact that steps or treads, whether in public places, or stairways in private residences, or upon public sidewalks or other places built for pedestrian purposes, seldom, if ever, exceed seven or eight inches, and the public has become accustomed to approximately such a distance. A misjudgment by the fraction of an inch is sufficient to disturb the physical equilibrium. ’ ’ (Also see Shellman v. Hershey, 31 Cal.App. 641 [161 P. 132].)
The evidence as to the nature of the exit, the 20 inches from the floor level to the ground, the slant and slick condition of the ground, was such as to make the question whether defendants were negligent in thus maintaining the exit or whether, if so maintained, it was unsafe or dangerous, one peculiarly for the jury’s resolution. Whether the step from the floor level to the ground and the ground immediately outside the opening were so negligently maintained as to render defendants liable in damages was a question of fact for the jury. (Tuttle v. Crawford, 8 Cal.2d 126 [63 P.2d 1128].)

There is no merit in defendants’ argument that there is no evidence as to how the accident happened or what caused plaintiff to fall except that she turned her ankle. Plaintiff testified: “ [J]ust as I stepped out there, it [her foot] just-well, I just went down”—that her ankle turned “ [o]n the ground it was so slanting and hard,” and “Q. [By Mr. Beam, attorney for plaintiff]: And then what happened, if anything? A. Well, I don’t know. The next thing I knew I was on the ground. Q. Where were you in relation to the house ? A. Well, just down at the side, right straight down from the doors.”

It is asserted plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence because she had used the exit once or twice before without falling, knew there was “bare ground” outside, knew the distance from the floor to the ground and that there were other means of exit from the house. Plaintiff had used the exit a time or two before the accident. When Hucky went out with the piece of sharp metal he went close to the sliding door. *458 Andrew was about two feet from that door, sitting on the ground. This was the nearest exit to where Andrew was sitting. Plaintiff testified: “I didn’t take time to go over the long ways”—this was 15 to 20 feet shorter—at this time she was more in a hurry to get out. Plaintiff testified further: “But when I went out that door that day, all I was thinking of was getting that piece of metal before either Hucky got it again or Andrew picked it up ’ ’—‘ ‘ [w] ell, like I say, I just had that metal on my mind”—that at the moment she took hold of the door handle all she “was thinking of was getting out to get that piece of metal. ’ ’

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310 P.2d 27, 150 Cal. App. 2d 454, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-vracin-calctapp-1957.