Skladzien v. W. M. Sutherland Building & Construction Co.

125 A. 614, 101 Conn. 340, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 28, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 A. 614 (Skladzien v. W. M. Sutherland Building & Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skladzien v. W. M. Sutherland Building & Construction Co., 125 A. 614, 101 Conn. 340, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 120 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Wheeleb, C. J.

The defendant was engaged in the construction of a theatre in Meriden, and on the night of December 23d, .1921, the plaintiff, accompanied by *342 three men, went into the theatre uninvited and was ordered out. They left as directed and, while walking along a passway, which was a part of the theatre property, on the way to the street, the plaintiff fell in a ditch across a part of the passway and suffered injuries. The defendant claimed that the plaintiff was a trespasser when upon the theatre premises. The admitted facts fully support this claim.

Plaintiff assigns as errors, the refusal to charge, as requested by the plaintiff, as to the duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, assuming that the plaintiff was a trespasser, and the charge as made as to such duty. In neither particular did the trial court err. The charge as given was unexceptionable under our law: “That if the owner or occupant of premises might by proper care, have avoided the injury to one, although a trespasser upon the land, he is liable for the results of his negligence. That is, that' when* the presence of a trespasser in a position of peril becomes known, or by reasonable care ought to become known, the duty is upon the part of the owner or occupant, his servants and agents, of using reasonable care and exercising ordinary precaution to avoid unjury to that person, even though he be a trespasser. The owner or tenant of land has the right to exclusive possession. Whoever violates this right is a trespasser, and such trespasser assumes all risk of danger which is incident to the condition of the premises. As to him the owner does not owe the legal duty of exercising care in keeping his premises in safe condition for his use, and the duty to a trespasser lies within comparatively narrow limits, because the owner of property is not ordinarily bound to anticipate and provide for the presence of trespassers. But the law is so that even if—as applied to this case— even if the plaintiff were a trespasser, and came upon the premises without any invitation, yet after the *343 defendant, its servants and agents, became aware of his presence, the defendant, by its agents and servants, was bound to exercise reasonable care to avoid injury to the plaintiff. So here it is for you to determine, whether the defendant, in the first place, or the defendant’s servant, ordered or directed the plaintiff to pass through the exit in question, and whether the defendant knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have known, that this way was unsafe, and what reasonable care required with reference to the conduct of the defendant and its servants toward the plaintiff under the circumstances.” Kalmich v. White, 95 Conn. 568, 572, 111 Atl. 845; Carlson v. Connecticut Co., 95 Conn. 724, 730, 112 Atl. 646; Pastorello v. Stone, 89 Conn. 286, 289, 93 Atl. 529.

Under this charge, the jury were given the governing principles and, afterward, their application. Both the substance and method of presentation were adapted to the understanding of the jury. We find no basis for the criticism that the charge failed to properly present the rule of the burden of proof imposed upon the plaintiff. The request to charge, that “the plaintiff had the right to assume, when he was directed to pass out the side door, that there was no hidden danger, and that he might safely proceed in the way he was directed to go, whether the defendant’s agent told him it was safe or not,” assumes that there was a hidden danger, and the court did not err in refusing to charge it. Had the request to charge been, in substance, that “if you find the plaintiff was directed by the duly authorized servant of the defendant to pass out of the east door and proceed east along the south passway, he had the right to assume that he could, if in the exercise of reasonable care, so pass in safety,” the court would have been bound to have given it. We find no error in the so-called additional appeal.

*344 There remains -the error predicated upon the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict. So far as the proof goes, there is not a single essential fact in plaintiff’s, evidence which was contradicted. Lay witnesses of the plaintiff differ slightly in some of the measurements as given by defendant’s surveyor. As no question is made of the correctness of the surveyor’s measurements and statements concerning this location, we accept these among the admitted facts. The admitted facts were that the defendant was engaged in the construction of a theatre in Meriden, which was located in the rear of and north of buildings containing apartments and stores on the north side of West Main Street, and being at least three stories, forty feet, in height, and the theatre having about the same height; that in the rear of the apartment and store buildings, were a stairway to the cellar and one to the upper floors, porches, an ash bin, cellar entrances, and a galvanized iron enclosure; that the theatre faced westerly, and upon the east of the apartment and store buildings, was a cement paved passageway ten feet wide leading from West Main Street to the rear of the theatre and the stage entrance; that upon the west side of the apartment and store buildings, was a passage fifteen feet wide extending from West Main Street to the theatre and providing the entrance to the theatre; that between the south side of the theatre and the apartment and store buildings, was a passageway from fourteen to eighteen feet in width between the theatre and the porches, stairways, etc., in the rear of these buildings; that there were three doors opening from the theatre into this south passway, each five feet nine inches in width, the east door being twenty-five feet from the stage of the theatre and fifty-one feet from the southeast corner of the theatre and from the nearest point to. the east passway; that opening *345 from the rear of the theatre, was a door three feet wide, its center being about ten feet from this southeast .corner, and another larger door north of this door, its center being about twenty feet from this southeast comer, the larger door opening into the stage, and the smaller door to the aisle south of the stage; that there was on the smaller door a sign “No admittance,” and over the larger door, a small electric bulb light, and above that a fire escape, this light being twenty feet from the southeast comer of the theatre; that on the night of the accident, December 23d, 1921, between 10:30 and 11 p. m., there was, extending directly or somewhat diagonally across the south passway, a ditch from six to eight feet long, two feet wide and five to six feet deep, with dirt spread about the opening from twelve to fifteen inches in height; that about four feet beyond the ditch, was a tripod containing a coke fire, and there was no other light along this passageway located between the theatre on the north and the apartment and store buildings on the south.

The plaintiff, Mr. Wilder, an attorney, the plaintiff’s brother and Mr. Erskine, an automobile salesman, testified that: On December 23d, 1921, between 10:30 and lip.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Salaman v. City of Waterbury, No. 0113165 (Apr. 7, 1995)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 3687 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1995)
Eckstrand v. Union Carbide Corp.
363 A.2d 124 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1975)
L'Heureux v. Hurley
168 A. 8 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Burk v. Corrado
165 A. 682 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Schmidt v. Schaub
161 A. 98 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Waselik v. Ferrie Construction Co.
157 A. 642 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1931)
Carr v. Oregon-Washington R.R. Nav. Co.
261 P. 899 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 614, 101 Conn. 340, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skladzien-v-w-m-sutherland-building-construction-co-conn-1924.