Rodefer v. Clinton Turner Verein

6 N.W.2d 17, 232 Iowa 691
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 27, 1942
DocketNo. 46125.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 17 (Rodefer v. Clinton Turner Verein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodefer v. Clinton Turner Verein, 6 N.W.2d 17, 232 Iowa 691 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

Appellant relied solely on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, ber petition charging general negligence only. Decedent was last seen in the Midway Tavern between 11:30 and 12:30 o’clock on the night of April 30, 1940, and about 6:30 the next morning was found on the floor of an elevator shaft located on the appellee’s premises, in an unconscious condition. He died before recovering consciousness.

Appellee owned two buildings in Clinton, Iowa, situated at the southeast corner of Fourth Avenue South and South Second Street. The Turner Building, a four-story brick structure, fronts west on South Second Street — a north-and-south street. The Turner Annex, a two-story building, is situated east of the Turner Building, facing north on Fourth Avenue South. Between the two buildings is an areaway extending south from Fourth Avenue a distance of about 75 feet to a wall at the south end of the Turner Building. The corridor then turns east at right angles between the rear of the annex and said wall about 50 feet to a dead end. At the north entrance, for a distance of-42 feet south the corridor is 7 feet wide, and for the remaining distance south it is 10 feet wide. The east-and-west way of this L-shaped passage is 12 feet 3 inches wide.

The freight elevator adjoins the south wall of the east-and-west corridor and is located about 13 feet east of the west side of the north-and-south way. It is 6 feet 10 inches wide and 9 feet 4 inches long, there being a clear space of about 5 feet 6 inches between the elevator and the north side of the way. The bottom of the shaft opens into a tunnel leading into the basement of the Turner Building.

The first floors of the two buildings are occupied by tenants. The rear of the stores of the Turner Building face the north-and-south corridor. The Midway Tavern and Alden’s Cafe are in the Turner Building. The rear door of the Midway Tavérn opens on the north-and-south corridor about 25 feet south of the entrance to the way on Fourth Avenue South. The rear door of the Alden Cafe is about 32 feet south of the entrance and the rear door of a barber shop opens on the south *693 end of the way. Banmeister’s Tayern is in the annex building and its rear door opens on the east part of the east-and-west areaway, about 12 feet from the dead end, and is about 28 feet east' of the elevator. There were no lights in the east-and-west corridor, and the only light in the north-and-south way was a small electric bulb in the rear of the Alden Cafe about 25 feet north of the elevator.

The cement floor of the • elevator shaft is 7 feet below the level of the corridor. When Mr. Rodefer was .found in the center of the floor of the shaft the elevator doors, which opened to the west, were open, and the elevator was at the second floor.

Appellant’s theory is that decedent left the rear door of the Midway Tavern about midnight and walked south about 40 feet to the east-and-west way, turned east, and, instead of passing down the east-and-west corridor north of the elevator, walked through the open doors and fell to the bottom of the pit, sustaining the injuries that resulted in his death. There were no guards around the elevator and there were no handles on the inside or outside of the elevator doors. The function of this elevator is described by appellee’s janitor, a witness for appellant, as follows:

“Q. Are you acquainted with the elevator shaft which is located in an areaway behind the Turner Building ? A. Partly, yes. I never had much to do with it, but I know how she is situated and about it. Q. Well, what purpose does it serve there? A. Well, mostly for freight. Q. Where does the freight come from and where does it go to? A. Well, May Alden has freight going down into the basement for her stuff and — Q. Well, where does the freight come from and where does it go to ? A. Well, it’s stuff that we get upstairs, like beer and soft drinks, and we pull it up. Q. Beer and soft drinks up to the Turner Society? A. On the third floor, yes.”

The Midway Tavern, located about 25 feet south of the north eiflrance to the corridor, maintains a neon sign on the Turner Building at the north entrance, with an arrow pointing south. Appellánt’s evidence shows, that during intermissions and after dances at the Modernistic Dance Hall, which is apparently east of the annex, patrons of the hall would go down the corridor *694 and enter the Midway Tavern and Alden’s Cafe for refreshments, through the rear doors instead of using the front entrances on South Second Street. Evidence that patrons of the dance hall might proceed south of the Midway Tavern and cafe at night and walk east down the unlighted east-and-west corridor 38 feet to Baumeister’s Tavern is unsatisfactory and unconvincing. Patrons desiring to go from the dance hall to Baumeister’s Tavern would naturally enter the front door on Fourth Avenue rather than to walk west of Baumeister’s Tavern to the corridor and through the entire corridor to its .rear door. The most that can be 'said of the use of the east-and-west corridor by patrons of the dance hall or others that night is that it was very rarely used.

I. Appellant’s first assignment of error is that the court erred in sustaining appellee’s motion for a directed verdict because the questions of appellee’s negligence and the proximate .cause of decedent’s injuries were for the jury. Appellant alleged in her petition that the falling of decedent into the shaft was the direct result of the negligent operation and maintenance of the passageway “and the elevator shaft and the openings thereto, then under the exclusive control and management of the defendant. ’ ’

Appellee’s answer admitted that “there is and was a freight elevator and shaft, owned and controlled by defendant, located at the south side of that- part of said passageway or areaway extending east and west at the rear of the storerooms fronting on Fourth Avenue South.”

Appellee’s answer must be construed as an admission that it was in complete, exclusive control of the elevator.

“The necessity of complete and exclusive control of the instrumentality, for the application of the res ipsa loquitur rule, has been repeatedly referred to by the court.” Whetstine v. Moravec, 228 Iowa 352, 368, 291 N. W. 425, 433.

The elevator was at the second floor and the doors opened directly into the pit when Mr. Rodefer was found in the center of the floor “facing the south, sort of on his side, lying-in that [a drawn-up] position.” There were no guardrails at the entrance to the elevator. One witness testified the elevator doors *695 were never locked but the doors were always closed ‘ ‘ so far as I know.” There was testimony that they were open part of the time.

The circumstances were sufficient to generate a presumption of negligence, that the accident happened through want of care on the part-of appellee. No evidence was introduced by appellee to rebut the presumption arising from the circumstances. ■

Appellant’s position is that, based on the evidence, the most likely explanation of the accident is that Mr. Rodefer was last seen in the Midway Tavern about 12:30 a. m.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 17, 232 Iowa 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodefer-v-clinton-turner-verein-iowa-1942.