Samuel Klein T/a Acme Rental Co. v. Aloysius Price

331 F.2d 800
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1964
Docket18152_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 331 F.2d 800 (Samuel Klein T/a Acme Rental Co. v. Aloysius Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel Klein T/a Acme Rental Co. v. Aloysius Price, 331 F.2d 800 (D.C. Cir. 1964).

Opinions

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge:

On July 25, 1959, about 9:00 p. m. Aloysius Price was drinking beer on the small private porch1 adjoining the light housekeeping room at the rear of the second floor of a rooming house in which he had lived for two years. He had just returned from a shopping expedition on which he had bought a case of beer and a container of yellow corn meal. When his wife, who was annoyed because he had not bought white corn meal, came out on the porch, he saw a knife protruding from her pocket. Alarmed because on a previous occasion she had attacked him with a knife, he seized a chair with which, in lion-tamer fashion, he pushed his wife against the wall. She in turn suddenly pushed the chair so forcibly that as a result Price fell backward through the railing to the ground below, taking the chair with him.

On February 21, 1961, Price filed this suit in the District Court to recover $80,000 from his landlord, Samuel Klein, [801]*801because of his injuries, contained the usual allegations of negligence in the maintenance of the railing, and charged violation of the District of Columbia Housing Code. These allegations were controverted. Klein’s motion for summary judgment was denied and the case went to trial on May 17, 1962. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was denied. Standing on his motion, Klein offered no proof, so the case was submitted to the jury on the plaintiff’s evidence. The result was a verdict for $20,000 in favor of Price. Klein’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was denied. He appeals. The complaint

It is necessary to examine the evidence for the plaintiff to see whether he made out a ease for the jury. That evidence showed that soon after the fall Price was taken to a hospital where, of course, the usual record of his admission and treatment was kept. This record, identified by a hospital attendant and read to the jury by Price’s attorney, included the following:

“ * * * Gave a history — patient states wife pushed him off a second story porch. * * * ”

Price was the only witness who testified as to how the incident occurred and as to the condition of the railing prior thereto. On direct examination he described the porch as follows:

“Well, it was about four by eight, I guess. I mean four foot from the building out and about eight or ten feet across and with a post on each corner and a post in the center and a railing from corner post to center post.”

He described its condition thus:

“Q. Now, from your observation in living there in this room and porch, how did the porch appear to you prior to July 25, 1959?
“A. It appeared to be all right. Otherwise I wouldn’t have been using it.”

He told of getting the wrong kind of corn meal and then said:

“So I went out on the porch. Took me a can of beer and went out on the porch. It was hot that day. And sat down.
“So later she came out. As I looked around and I heard her footsteps and I noticed this paring knife in her pocket, so I asked her what was the knife doing in her pocket.
“So she returned no answer, just walked towards me and there was a chair sitting near me. I grabbed the chair by the back and just stuck it out towards her, the feet out towards her, back to back against the building and asked her what was the matter.
“While I was standing there unexpectedly she just gave the chair a sudden push and I just stumbled back and fell and most of my body hit the. railing there on the right-hand center post.
“And the railing just opened up like a gate and I kept going right on — right down on the ground. I fell on this ice box that was laying there and I rolled off that on the ground.
“That is all I know about it. Then after I hit down there, I was in such pain I don’t know what else happened.”

Cross-examination as to the cause of the fall included the following:

“Q. Now then, what did Mrs. Price do when you had her penned up against the wall with the leg of the chair ?
“A. She stood there for awhile and all of a sudden she pushed the chair and after that I had no chance — she pushed me and I just fell backwards.
“Q. When you fell backwards what did you hit?
“A. I hit the railing.
“Q. And the railing opened and you fell down?
“A. Yes.
[802]*802“Q. And the chair was with you as you went down?
“A. That is correct.
“Q. The chair fell to the ground also?
“A. I didn’t have a chance to turn it loose. It happened so quick.
“Q. And your wife did push you off the porch?
“A. No, she pushed the chair and I fell when she pushed the chair.”

Price testified that, whenever he had had any complaint about a condition in the premises he rented, the necessary repairs had been promptly made. He had never complained about the railing, however, as it did not appear to be weak. In a pretrial deposition he stated that he had leaned against it on occasion. He admitted that in a conversation with his wife after the incident “she said it was my fault and I said it was her fault * * After the fall, when he was lying on the ground in great pain, he said to his wife, “[G]et away from me.” They never lived together after that night.

Over Klein’s objection, the trial judge received in evidence Sections 2501 and 2508 of the District of Columbia Housing Regulations.2 Particular reference was made to the following sentence in Section 2508: “All steps, rails, balustrades, or other guards shall be of sound material and securely fastened.” Price relies upon Whetzel v. Jess Fisher Management Co.3 as making the housing regulations pertinent here and as justifying a finding that Klein was negligent.

The Whetzel case relied upon by appellee held that a breach of the duty imposed upon the landlord by the housing regulation is some evidence of negligence. But this rule has no application unless there is some showing of breach of the duty imposed by the regulations. Price’s testimony that the railing “opened up like a gate” when he fell backward against it in the scuffle with his wife is not evidence of negligence or of an inherent weakness in the rail. On the contrary, the record discloses that appellee, upon his admission to the hospital as well as in his testimony on trial, said that his wife pushed him off the porch.

The real question is whether the housing regulations, or the common law duties as a landlord, required appellant to provide a railing of sufficient strength to withstand the impact of a man’s body striking it in the course of the scuffle described in appellee’s testimony. We conclude that a landlord is not required to provide a safe arena for an altercation such as occurred here.

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Bluebook (online)
331 F.2d 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-klein-ta-acme-rental-co-v-aloysius-price-cadc-1964.