Southland Hotel, Inc. v. Blanks

226 S.W.2d 162, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 5987
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 162 (Southland Hotel, Inc. v. Blanks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southland Hotel, Inc. v. Blanks, 226 S.W.2d 162, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

Appellee, C. L. Blanks, instituted this suit against the appellant, Southland Hotel, Inc., to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by him on December 18,1946, as the result of negligence of the appellant. Appellee was a guest in the hotel and occupied a room on the ninth floor. The elevator extended only from the basement to the eighth floor and the ninth floor was reached by means of a stairway from the eighth floor. Ap-pellee had occupied the room on the ninth floor for some three weeks at the time he was injured. In order to reach the eighth floor and the elevator from his room, it was necessary to descend the stairway from the ninth floor which consisted of two flights of stairs, the first flight consisting of twenty steps to a landing and [163]*163the second flight, in the opposite direction, consisting of twelve steps. Appellant received his injury about 7:30 P.M-⅛ December 18, 1946. He had started from his room to the lobby on the first floor of the hotel and had descended the first flight of the stairway. When he started to descend the second flight, he reached for .the handrail, lost his balance and fell down the entire second flight of twelve steps from which he received serious and permanent personal injuries. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues and the jury found that appellant failed to provide the stairway with an adequate system of lighting; failed to provide the steps with corrugation or matting; and was maintaining steps of the stairway that were worn so that they were smooth and ..slippery. It found that each of these was negligence and a proximate cause of appellee’s injury. It also exonerated appellee from any contributory negligence and fixed his damages at the total sum of $24,024.55 for which judgment was entered in his favor against the appellant.

Appellant perfected an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth District at Dallas, and the case has been transferred to this court by order of the Supreme Court. After the testimony had all been adduced, appellant filed and urged a motion for a peremptory instruction which was denied by the court and this action of the court constitutes the. principal, and controlling, issue in the case. Appellee had been a guest and patron of the hotel during most of the time for three months before he was injured and had occupied the room on the ninth floor for three weeks immediately preceding his injury. No one but appellee was present and the only evidence of the manner in which the accident occurred came from him. He said that the first flight of the stairway was dimly lighted from the lights in the hall of the ninth floor and that he had no difficulty in negotiating it. He said he had made approximately fifteen trips to his room on that floor and had therefore traversed the stairway in going to and returning from his room at least thirty times, but that he had never before ascended or descended it in the nighttime; that, when he reached the landing on this unfortunate trip, he discovered the second flight of the stairway was dark; that, when he started to continue down the lower flight, he reached for the railing before he attempted the first step; that he slipped — “evidently lost my balance and the next thing I knew, well, —I was semi-conscious and people were standing over me at the foot of the staircase.”- On cross examination he said: “I seemed to have lost my balance when I reached for the rail;” that he both slipped and lost his balance; that the slipping and losing his balance happened simultaneously; and that the act of reaching for the rail caused him to lose his balance.

Appellee was an invitee of appellant and a guest in -its hotel. The rule governing the duties and responsibilities of invitors, or those .who operate places of business, such as hotels and mercantile establishments, to their guests or invitees has many times been announced and repeated by the courts. It is well stated in Marshall v. San Jacinto Building, Inc., 67 S.W.2d 372, 374, by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Ninth District, in a quotation from.45 C.J. 837, as follows: ‘“The duty to keep premises safe for invitees applies only to defects or conditions which are in the nature of hidden dangers/traps, snares, pitfalls, and the like, in that they are not known to the invitee, and would not be observed by him in the exercise of ordinary care. The invitee assumes all normal or ordinary risks attendant upon the use of the premises, and the owner or occupant is under no duty to reconstruct or alter the premises so as to obviate known and obvious dangers, nor is he liable for injury to an invitee resulting from a danger which was obvious or should have been observed in the exercise of reasonable care.’ Again, at page 868, same volume: ‘No precautions are necessary where the danger is obvious and unconcealed, or known to the person injured, or where it was the duty of the person injured to do the thing, failure to do which caused the injury.’ ”

Appellee contends that, under the conditions in which he was living in the [164]*164hotel as its guest or patron, it was the duty of the hotel to see that the stairway was at all times properly lighted and maintained in a reasonably safe condition for his use and that the evidence clearly showed it failed to discharge its duty to him of keeping the second flight of steps properly lighted and in a reasonably safe condition for the use of its guests. His principal contention seems to be that he fell down the flight of stairs and was injured because of the darkness and failure of appellant to maintain a light so that he could see his way down the stairs and observe the existing conditions there. He had been a guest or patron of the hotel for some three months and had occupied his room on the ninth floor for three weeks before the accident. He had traversed the steps, either ascending or descending, at least thirty times and must have known the condition of the steps before he attempted to descend them on the occasion of his fall. The hotel had been constructed many years before appellee wa's injured and the testimony shows that, although many people had occupied rooms on the ninth floor and traversed the steps throughout the many years of its existence, no one ever before had fallen or was injured by traversing the stairway. The conditions on the ninth floor and of the stairway at the time ap-pellee was injured were the same as they had been for thirty years or more. There were no hidden traps, snares, or pitfalls, in tire stairway and no condition existed that was not known to the appellant or could not have been observed by him in the exercise of ordinary care. While he said he had not before descended the stairway when it was dark, no condition is revealed that did not exist each time he traversed it. Even though it was dark, no condition existed which prevented its being safely traversed by the use of a reasonable degree of caution. The risks attending its use being the normal and ordinary risks, and nothing having been placed upon it nor any change made in it of which appellee was not informed or could not have known by the exercise of reasonable care, he assumed the risks incident to his attempt to descend it on his way from his room to the lobby of the hotel even if the dark condition of the stairway had, under the evidence, been responsible for his injury.

When the testimony is carefully analyzed, however, we think it is clear that the dark condition of the stairway had nothing to do with appellee’s injury and was not responsible for it.

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Related

Blanks v. Southland Hotel, Inc.
229 S.W.2d 357 (Texas Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 162, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southland-hotel-inc-v-blanks-texapp-1949.