Raber v. Tumin

226 P.2d 574, 36 Cal. 2d 654, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 212
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1951
DocketL. A. 21530
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 226 P.2d 574 (Raber v. Tumin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raber v. Tumin, 226 P.2d 574, 36 Cal. 2d 654, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 212 (Cal. 1951).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

Plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries. Named as defendants are Saul Tumin, who was the lessee of a store in which the injuries were received, and Tumin’s employe Endriss, a carpenter. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted the defendants’ motions for nonsuit, and plaintiff appeals. We conclude that as to both defendants the matter should have gone to the jury.

The granting of a motion for nonsuit is warranted “. . . when, and only when, disregarding conflicting evidence, and giving to plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, indulging in evéry legitimate inference which may be drawn from that evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.” (Card v. Boms (1930), 210 Cal. 200, 202 [291 P. 190]; see, also, Golceff v. Sugarman (1950), ante, pp. 152, 153 [222 P.2d 665]; Blumberg v. M. & T. Incorporated (1949), 34 Cal.2d 226, 229 [209 P.2d 1], and cases there cited.) “Unless it can be said as a matter of law, that ... no other reasonable conclusion is legally deducible from the evidence, and that any other holding would be so lacking in evidentiary support that a reviewing court would be impelled to reverse it upon appeal, or the trial court to set it aside as a matter of law, the trial court is not justified in taking the case from the jury.” (Estate of Lances (1932), 216 Cal. 397, 400 [14 P.2d 768].) In other words, while in most appeals it is the duty of the reviewing court to indulge every reasonable intendment in favor of sustaining the trial court, substantially the reverse is true when the appeal is from an order of nonsuit. In the latter case the appellate court must view the evidence as though judgment had gone in favor of the appellant, and order a reversal if such a judgment can be sustained.

Stated in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the evidence may be summarized as follows:

Plaintiff, an electrical contractor, aged 36, at defendant Tumin’s request went at about 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon to a store in the City of Long Beach, which Tumin occupied as lessee, in order to cheek for any changes that might be necessary in the wiring. Inside the store plaintiff noticed [657]*657defendant Endriss, an employe of Tumin, hammering on a partition which divided the front, or “show room,” of the store from the rear part thereof. The showroom was between 16 and 17 feet wide with the front door approximately in the middle on the north side, and about 16% feet deep from the front, or north, wall, to the partition. After plaintiff and Tumin had talked together for about 10 minutes someone from outside called to Tumin and he left the store; plaintiff, who was standing “not very far from the center” of the showroom, turned to leave the store and “believes” that as he approached the front door he saw a ladder standing “almost vertically” upright against the front (north) wall at a point near the east wall; he was “very close to the front entrance when I got knocked out”; he does not “remember falling down”; he regained consciousness in the hospital. While in the store plaintiff saw no “holes in the floor” or debris or “obstructions of any kind” in his pathway; the floor “was not so slippery” that he “had difficulty holding” his feet on the floor; neither he, Tumin nor Endriss used the ladder while plaintiff was in the store; no one except plaintiff, Tumin, and Endriss was in the store; and during this period Endriss was standing on the floor while working.

Defendant Endriss testified that he had begun working in the store for Tumin on the Friday prior to the Monday on which plaintiff was injured; that in addition to demolishing the partition on which he was hammering, his work for Tumin was to include the setting of showcases and wall fixtures that Tumin “had coming from another store”; that his hammering on the partition, which was 8 feet tall, caused it to “vibrate or to jump . . . some”; the floor, of composition tile, was slippery, heavily waxed, and he slid and slipped several times and fell down on it; when he entered the store the ladder, which was a ship’s ladder 8 feet long, with sides made of one by sixes and treads “possibly” of one by eights, had been lying horizontally on its edge leaning up against the west wall of the store; he did not “remember” using, or observing anyone else use, the ladder; he heard, but did not see, plaintiff fall and discovered him lying near the east store wall with the ladder lying flat across his hips; plaintiff’s head was approximately 6 feet west of the east wall and one foot south of the north, or front, wall, and his feet were near the east wall; at the time of the accident the light was very good and no one else was in the store. Endriss further testified as follows: “Q. In this accident, when you were [658]*658working for Mr. Tumin, you helped him move some showcases around, didn’t you ... A. Yes, that is true. Q. It wasn’t simply carpenter work, it was some general handy man work, in addition to carpentering, although that was the principal detail 1 A. That is the line of our work naturally . . . Q. Do you know whether or not on the day that Mr. Raber was injured, that there was any object of any kind or objects which were standing at any point in the easterly half of the front store room or show room? A. Not that I recall.”

The facts as to how and when and by -whom the ladder was brought into the store, and as to by whom it was raised from a horizontal to a substantially vertical position, and who had charge of it, are not specifically shown, but we think the evidence hereinabove epitomized, considered with that hereinafter discussed, is sufficient to support a finding that defendants had possession of the store and of the ladder and that they were exercising dominion over such property.

According to defendant Tumin he had just signed the lease and taken possesssion of the store between 9 and 10 o’clock in the morning of the day the accident occurred, and at that time saw the ladder lying on the floor along the west wall of the store.

The doctor who examined plaintiff at the emergency hospital following the accident testified that plaintiff had suffered a fractured skull and that “I don’t believe it would be speculation to say that this man lying there unconscious with abrasions on his head, and bleeding from his ear, that there had been a blow to the head.” Plaintiff’s wife testified that during the 14 years of their marriage plaintiff “has been very health y. He has never been sick.”

Plaintiff was a business visitor toward whom Tumin, together with the servant through whom he was acting in altering the premises, “was obliged to exercise ordinary care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition, or to warn ... of danger. The duty was not limited to conditions actually known ... to be dangerous, but extended also to conditions which might have been found dangerous by the exercise of reasonable care. [Citations.] ” (Blumberg v. M. & T. Incorporated (1949), supra, 34 Cal.2d 226, 229.)

Plaintiff urges that the evidence justifies application of the res ipsa loquitur doctrine, and that the nonsuit was therefore improperly granted (see Hinds v. Wheadon

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Bluebook (online)
226 P.2d 574, 36 Cal. 2d 654, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raber-v-tumin-cal-1951.