Smith v. Cedar Rapids Country Club

124 N.W.2d 557, 255 Iowa 1199, 1963 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 796
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1963
Docket50744
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 124 N.W.2d 557 (Smith v. Cedar Rapids Country Club) 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
Smith v. Cedar Rapids Country Club, 124 N.W.2d 557, 255 Iowa 1199, 1963 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 796 (iowa 1963).

Opinion

Larson, J.

This is an action for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff, Lourania Smith, sustained while attending a luncheon at the defendant Cedar Rapids Country Club on May 7, *1202 1959. The petition alleged that the plaintiff was not a member of and bad never been in the Cedar Eapids Country Club prior to the date of injury; that she attended and paid the sum of $2.00 for the luncheon as a member of the Cedar Eapids Women’s Club; that she was directed to the ballroom on a floor which had been prepared as a dance floor, with a particularly hard and slippery surface, improper and dangerous for its use at that time. The petition further alleged that the wax or waxes used thereon were improperly applied and also that the same were not spread evenly and uniformly, but were slippery in some spots and not in others; that she was not warned of the slippery condition of the floor; that she stepped on an unusually and particularly slippery spot and fell, breaking her hip.

Defendant’s answer denied the allegations of negligence and, as a matter of affirmative defense, denied that the plaintiff was an invitee, and alleged that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the condition of the floor of the ballroom.

The trial court submitted the case to the jury and advised it that the plaintiff was an invitee and declined to submit to the jury the defendant’s contention that the plaintiff had assumed the risk.

The specifications of negligence alleged by plaintiff and submitted by the court were:

“1. In using, upon a wooden floor where plaintiff Lourania Smith was permitted to go, waxes resulting in a particularly hard and slippery surface, improper and dangerous for the use to which the floor was being used at the time Mrs. Smith was permitted to go thereon.
“2. In improperly applying to and maintaining bn the floor a wax or waxes with the result that the same were not spread evenly and uniformly on the floor but spread or maintained in such a way as to be extremely slippery in spots and not in others.
“3. In not warning the guests, including Mrs. Smith, of the slippery condition of the floor.”

The court also .told the jury: “Mrs. Smith further alleges that she was herself free from contributory negligence.”

*1203 There is no issue as to contributory negligence presented in this appeal.

The jury returned a verdict for Mrs. Smith but not for her husband, and from a judgment accordingly defendant appeals. Mrs. Smith will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff.

Defendant assigns ten errors, but regroups them into six in its reply argument. Basically, they may be reduced to three principal contentions, and for the sake of brevity we will consider them as follows: (1) The court erred in holding plaintiff was an invitee at the time of her injury and in so instructing the jury; (2) there was no relevant, competent and substantial evidence of defendant’s failure to perform its duty to plaintiff; and (3) there was sufficient improper conduct of plaintiff’s counsel to require the court to grant defendant’s motions for a mistrial or a new trial in these proceedings.

I. The general definition of an invitee is that he is one who goes to a place of business either by express or implied invitation of the owner or occupant on business of mutual interest to both or in connection with the business of the owner. Holmes v. Gross, 250 Iowa 238, 248, 93 N.W.2d 714, and cases cited. Therein we recognized and approved a statement of the responsibility of an owner in LaSell v. Tri-States Theatre Corp., 233 Iowa 929, at 946, 11 N.W.2d 36, at 45, as follows: “It is a general rule, recognized without dissent, that an owner or occupant of buildings or premises, who directly or impliedly invites or induces others to enter therein, owes an active, affirmative duty to such persons to use reasonable, ordinary care, to keep such premises in a reasonably safe condition, so as not to unreasonably or unnecessarily expose them to danger.”

To determine plaintiff’s status, and thereby the duty owed her by defendant, a brief statement of the undisputed facts should be made. The defendant is a private country club in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, maintaining a clubhouse in which there is a ballroom used both for dining and dancing. While the club’s facilities are for members and guests, on occasion certain facilities and services are offered to and used by other groups and members of the general public for such purposes as college *1204 dances, wedding receptions, and other club luncheons. In this case the group was the Cedar Rapids Women’s Club. As a member of that group, the plaintiff attended a brunch in the ballroom of the defendant-club, which was served pursuant to an arrangement between a committee of the Women’s Club and the defendant’s manager whereby the Country Club was to charge $2.00 per person, and actually received $424 for serving this brunch to those present on that occasion. Plaintiff paid for her ticket at the time she entered the ballroom on the morning of May 7, 1959; She was then directed into the ballroom where tables were already set up for the luncheon. There can be ho doubt under these facts that she was then an invitee or, in other words, she was a business visitor. In Restatement of the Law', Torts, chapter 13, section 332, it is stated: “A business visitor is a person who is invited or permitted to enter or remain on land in the possession of another for a purpose directly or indirectly connected with business dealings between them.”

There is no evidence to sustain appellant’s contention that she was merely a gratuitous licensee, which is defined in the Restatement, section 331, as “A gratuitous licensee is any licensee other than a business visitor as defined in §332.” In Comment (a) thereunder it is stated: “The phrase ‘gratuitous licensee’ includes three types of persons. 1. A licensee whose presence upon the land is solely for the licensee’s own purposes, in which the possessor has no interest, either business or social, and to whom the privilege of entering is extended as a mere favor by express consent or by general or local custom. 2. The members of the possessor’s household, except boarders or paying guests and servants, who, as stated in §332, Comments f and g, are business visitors. * * * 3. Social guests who, in a sense, are persons temporarily adopted into the possessor’s family.”

On the other hand, under Comment a, section 332, it is stated: “Business visitors fall into two classes. The first class includes persons who are invited or permitted to come upon the land for a purpose directly or indirectly connected with the business which the possessor conducts thereon, * * *. The second class includes those who come upon the land for a purpose which is connected with their own business which itself is di *1205 rectly or indirectly connected with any purpose, business or otherwise, for which the possessor uses the land. * # *. b.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.W.2d 557, 255 Iowa 1199, 1963 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cedar-rapids-country-club-iowa-1963.