Steeves v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.

24 A.2d 606, 92 N.H. 52, 1942 N.H. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 3, 1942
DocketNo. 3288.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 A.2d 606 (Steeves v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steeves v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co., 24 A.2d 606, 92 N.H. 52, 1942 N.H. LEXIS 16 (N.H. 1942).

Opinion

Page, J.

I. The plaintiff discovered on the morning of the trial some indications of unevenness in the floor, but only by the use of a level. The denial of the motion to amend, made after the trial began, was within the discretion of the trial court, and it does not clearly appear that the exercise of discretion was erroneous. No question of law is raised. Piper v. Hilliard, 58 N. H. 198; Lyons v. Child, 61 N. H. 72.

II. The question of the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the submission of the case to the jury may be discussed in two branches.

(1) Would the evidence of unevenness in the floor have justified a finding that such a defect in the construction caused or helped to caüse the plaintiff’s fall? Evidence of the defect as a contributory cause, in combination with the alleged slippery condition of the floor, was freely admitted. If the defect was not findably causal in part, it could not be found to be the cause under the declaration, if amended.

There was some evidence of a “hump” in the floor which showed a lowering of grade amounting to three-eighths of an inch in a lateral *54 distance of two and a half feet. Whether such a slight grade, imperceptible to the eye of any witness and not discovered on an earlier inspection by one of the plaintiff’s experts, could cause the plaintiff to fall, depended upon opinion evidence. But opinion evidence favorable to the plaintiff could obtain ultimate standing only if it could be found that the plaintiff in fact slipped on the “hump.” This “hump” was accurately placed by the evidence, but the evidence as to the precise place where the plaintiff fell is so vague that it is at best conjectural whether she fell on the “hump.”

The floor of the office was laid with asphalt tiles six inches square. Extending from the door of the room to the cashier’s desk, there was a rubber mat four feet wide. At the right of the mat, as one entered the room from the vestibule, was a directory table or writing desk, which could be reached only by stepping off the mat and walking on the tile. As was her. custom, the plaintiff left the mat in order to go to this table, where she expected to lay her parcels before going to the cashier’s desk to pay her monthly bill. She stepped off with her right foot, and fell before she took another step.

The “hump” was nearly opposite the middle of the table. If the plaintiff had walked along the mat a distance of eleven and a half feet, and had then stepped off, her foot might have reached the “hump” on the first step. The detailed plan shows that this was the furthest point at which she was likely to leave the mat. A single step off at any point nearer the door than ten feet (the ten-foot point also was opposite the table) could not have brought her to the “hump.” On the testimony taken most favorably for the plaintiff, there is nothing to show that she stepped off the mat except somewhere in the general vicinity of the table. This is insufficient to make her contact with the “hump” more than pure conjecture. '

The plaintiff’s own testimony is against her at this point. She first said that she passed through the vestibule, whence the door led to the office, and then “walked right straight along over to that desk” (the directory table or writing desk). If this testimony were taken at face value, she could not have reached the “hump” without taking more than a single step on the tiles and she more than once stated explicitly that she took but a single step from the mat. This was on direct examination by her counsel. If she was mistaken or misled, she had opportunity to clarify her testimony on re-direct, when the following testimony was given.

“Q. Now with reference to Mr. Burns asking if you stepped off at the same place to go to that little desk each time, you said that *55 you could not say you stepped off the same place. Did you always have one certain place on which you stepped off? A. No, I just went right along. Q. Just as it happened? A. Just as it happened. Q. This day you stepped off about where with regard to that desk, if you remember? If you don’t remember it is all right. A. I don’t remember.” This is clear, definite testimony, by which she is bound. Harlow v. LeClair, 82 N. H. 506.

Later, on re-cross examination, she was asked, “you stepped off at about the same place as you always had?” She replied, “No, I think it was a little farther back. . . .” If this impression is entitled to any credit in view of her testimony that she could not remember, it means that she stepped off short of the “hump.” If it is not to be believed, then the plaintiff’s own testimony leaves it entirely conjectural whether the “hump” had anything to do with her fall.

A scratch, which may or may not have been made by the plaintiff’s heel on the tile, was not related by any testimony to the “hump,” except conjeeturally. On the other hand two of the defendant’s employees testified that the plaintiff fell at a point opposite the space between the little table and the telephone, well before she reached the “hump.” Conjecture cannot take the place of definite testimony in this regard.

It could not be found that the “hump,” either as a separate structural defect, or in conjunction with the slippery condition of the floor, had any part in causing the plaintiff’s fall.

(2) The other issue on which the case was offered to the jury was the condition of the floor without respect to the “hump.” The plaintiff claimed that the tiles were highly polished with wax so lately applied as to make them very slippery. According to every witness the tiling was such as is in common use, and so far the evidence favors the defendant. It was laid in 1929. For four years after that it was waxed periodically. The defendant’s evidence was consistent and definite that the tiles were never waxed from 1933 to the date of the accident in 1937. In legal theory, this might be disbelieved, but that would leave the plaintiff with her original burden of proving that it had been waxed meanwhile.

The position taken by the plaintiff’s expert witnesses was that such a tile floor ought to be waxed; that waxing was reasonable and proper care; that a floor so waxed would be perfectly safe. But they said it would be unsafe if rugs or mats were laid on such a floor. So the laying of the mat in February, 1937, according to them, created a new danger where all was safety before. Their theory depended *56 upon the contrast between the safe footing upon the rubber mat and a slippery tiling which would otherwise be amply safe. They thought that the floor was reasonable except for this combination of mat and slippery waxed tiles.

As one of them said, “a person that’s walking on a mat has an unconscious feeling of stability . . . and you step off from that mat where you have been gripping it with your feet and you don’t expect that slide that’s coming.” Therefore he concluded with the opinion that the combination is not good practice. But since the theory depends upon slippery waxed tiles, he and the other experts admitted that there would be no danger if the tiling had not been waxed for the period of four years as claimed by the defendant.

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58 A.2d 745 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.2d 606, 92 N.H. 52, 1942 N.H. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steeves-v-new-england-telephone-telegraph-co-nh-1942.