Smith v. Brown

390 P.2d 364, 237 Or. 23, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 328
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1964
StatusPublished

This text of 390 P.2d 364 (Smith v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Brown, 390 P.2d 364, 237 Or. 23, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 328 (Or. 1964).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of the circuit court which it entered in favor of the defendant after it had sustained the latter’s motion for a judgment of involuntary nonsuit. The basis of the allowance of the motion was a lack of evidence, so the trial judge ruled, to sustain the averments of negligence.

The defendant was the operator of a hotel in Klamath Falls. When the plaintiff was in the hotel February 12, 1958, she fell to the floor, due, so she claims, to a defect in a brief stairway which she was about to descend. The trial judge did not deem the brief stairway was in fact a flight of stairs; he referred to it as “a step down from one level of floor to the next level.” The plaintiff, immediately prior to her injury, was engaged in playing cards in the hotel’s Pine Grove Room and desired to go to the women’s lavatory. The floor of the Pine Grove Room was 14 inches higher than the lobby’s floor. Evidently the women’s lavatory was on the same level as the lobby floor. The brief stairs, or step down, aforementioned, was apparently a means for going to or from the Pine Grove Room. If one does not deem that a stairway consists of any part of the floor upon which [25]*25he stands immediately before stepping down, and likewise does not include any part of the lower floor, at the foot of the steps, then defendant’s so-called stairway consisted of only one step. The stairway or step down had two risers, each about six inches in height, and only one tread. Anyone going down the stairway stepped from the Pine Grove Room floor onto the single step and then onto the lobby floor.

The outer edge of the floor of the Pine Grove Room was trimmed with a metal strip to which the parties referred as stripping. It was about 1% inches broad. "When the plaintiff had reached the outer edge of the floor of the Pine Grove Room and was preparing to step down to the lobby floor, her right heel somehow got caught and presently she fell.

Upon the plaintiff’s request the trial judge and the jury viewed the premises.

The plaintiff presents two assignments of error. The first contends that the trial judge erred in ruling that the stripping was not shown to have been defective. The second challenges a ruling that the defendant was not negligent in having no railing upon the stairway.

February 12, 1958, the plaintiff was in the Pine Grove Room. She and some others who belonged to a club had eaten lunch there, and at its conclusion had begun to play bridge. The plaintiff was familiar with the Pine Grove Room and with the stairway. She had used both in the past. Shortly after the play of cards was begun, the plaintiff left her card table and started to walk to the ladies’ room. In so doing, she went through a door and reached the outer edge of the floor of the Pine Grove Room (trimmed with the stripping) when her right heel got caught somehow and she fell to the floor. The plaintiff was 78 years of age, and her [26]*26injuries were serious. The Statement of Facts which constitutes a part of the brief which plaintiff’s counsel filed in this court states:

“The exit from the Pine Grove Room into the lobby of the hotel consisted of two doors which opened into a small cloakroom. Immediately outside the doors there was a small landing, which was at the same level as the floor of the Pine Grove Room. Then there were two steps down to descend to the same level as the main floor of the hotel, as admitted by defendant’s answer. The distance from the first step to the doors was about a foot, and the steps extended for the full length of the cloakroom.
“There was linoleum covering the landing, and the edge of the top step had a binding or stripping of aluminum-colored metal along the edge.”

Although the foregoing quotation from plaintiff’s brief refers to “two steps” it counts as one of the two the outer extremity of the floor of the Pine Grove Room which the plaintiff had reached immediately before starting to step down.

The complaint alleges that the “two steps” were “and for a long time prior thereto had been in a defective, unsafe and dangerous condition in that the stripping on the edge of the top step was turned upward so that said stripping was not lying flat on the tread of said step.” The complaint further alleges that the “two step” stairway had been “for a long time prior thereto in a defective, unsafe and dangerous condition in that no handrail or guard was provided for the safety of the patrons of said hotel.”

When the plaintiff reached the edge of the Pine Grove Room floor her foot was caught. At that moment she was still upon the floor upon which she had [27]*27been playing cards. She had not yet stepped down to a lower level. The outer edge of the floor was trimmed, as we have said, with a metal strip 1% inches broad. The plaintiff argues that the stripping was defective, that is, that it was upturned and caught her right heel.

Although the plaintiff sought to indicate that the stripping upon the outer edge of the top step was upturned or otherwise defective, neither she nor anyone else so swore. Testimony to that effect is absent. The plaintiff testified:

“Q Did you at any time, Mrs. Smith, see the metal stripping in a defective condition, that is bent up or turned up, did you actually ever see that?
“A I don’t believe I did.”

The plaintiff conceded that when she noticed that her right heel was caught she looked down directly at the stripping.

The plaintiff’s daughter, who attended the luncheon and card party with her mother, testified, as a witness for the plaintiff, that after she took her mother to a hospital she returned to the hotel and examined the stripping. Further, she testified that she examined it on several subsequent occasions, including the day of the trial. She was not asked whether she found any defect in the stripping and gave no testimony upon that score. The daughter’s husband testified that within three days of the accident he examined the stairway and stripping. He made some examinations subsequent thereto. Like his wife, he was not asked whether he noticed any defects or irregularities. Further, like his wife, he gave no information upon the subject.

[28]*28In Mooney v. Holcomb, 15 Or 639, Mr. Justice Lord said:

“It is admitted that the non-production of evidence clearly within the power of a party creates a strong presumption that, if produced, it would be against him. Our Code provides, ‘that if the weaker and less satisfactory evidence is offered, when it appears that stronger and more satisfactory was within the power of the party, the evidence offered should be reviewed with distrust.’ (Hill’s Code, § 845, subd. 7.) * *

The defendant was called as an adverse witness by the plaintiff. In response to questions submitted by plaintiff’s counsel, he testified that he was familiar with the stripping and stairway. He was not asked whether he had even noticed any defects. According to him, the stripping appeared to be “in fairly good shape” every time that he glanced at it.

We do not know why plaintiff’s counsel asked none of the three witnesses just mentioned whether he or she had noticed any defect in the stripping. In brief, none of the witnesses gave any testimony which indicates that the step or stripping was defective.

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Related

Mooney v. Holcomb
16 P. 716 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
390 P.2d 364, 237 Or. 23, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-brown-or-1964.