Stephens v. Murphree

433 S.W.2d 673, 58 Tenn. App. 497, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 29, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 433 S.W.2d 673 (Stephens v. Murphree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Murphree, 433 S.W.2d 673, 58 Tenn. App. 497, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 310 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

I

THE CASE. ■

SHRIVER, P. J.

The parties will be referred to as .plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the Court ■below. '

- Plaintiff, Edythe P. Stephens, sued the defendant, - Mary Elizabeth Murphree, for personal injuries received when plaintiff slipped and fell on a walkway leading from the street to the apartment .rented by plaintiff from the defendant owner. ...

[499]*499The case was tried in the Fifth Circuit Court of Davidson Connty with a jury, and, at the conclusion of all the proof, the Trial Judge directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. After the motion for a new trial was overruled the cause was appealed in error here.

II

THE FACTS

There is no substantial dispute as to the facts in this case.

The defendant was the owner of a duplex apartment house at 701 Crescent Road, in Nashville, in which the two apartments were rented to different tenants. It was charged in the declaration and admitted in a special plea that the walkways serving the premises remained in the possession and control of the defendant for the common use of the tenants, and that the defendant, therefore, had the continuing duty to exercise reasonable care to keep the premises safe for the tenants.

Plaintiff moved into the apartment on the evening of January 21, 1966, and the accident happened on the following day, to wit: January 22, 1966.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Stephens, testified that she is a woman 57 years old, and, prior to the accident in question, was in good health. She is a licensed practical nurse and an office employee of a local doctor.

The walkway leading from the street to the house occupied by plaintiff slopes downward toward the house and is constructed of various sized and colored slabs of marble set in concrete. On the night of January 21st, after plaintiff had moved in that afternoon, it snowed, begin[500]*500ning about 10:25 P.M. and continued to snow during a good portion of the next day.

On the morning of Saturday, January 22nd, plaintiff walked through the snow on the walkway in question proceeding to her car which was parked in the street and drove to work. When she left work about noon she went to a grocery store where she purchased some milk, bread, etc. and then drove home. She was dressed in a nurse’s uniform, had on nurse’s shoes and a new pair of rubber galoshes. The right galosh was made an exhibit to her testimony, the left one having been cut off her foot after she fell and was hurt. The snow was several inches deep according to her testimony, which is substantiated by the testimony of other witnesses. As she proceeded down the walkway from the street to the house she experienced no difficulty in walking through the snow in the usual manner until, suddenly, her left foot slipped and she fell breaking her ankle and suffering painful and rather serious injuries.

She testified that the snow came off the walk with her foot, exposing the surface of the walk at the spot where she had fallen, and she discovered that her foot had slipped on a green slab of the marble in the walkway. She called for help and remained down on the walk until Mr. Albert Bowen came, to her aid and called an ambulance which took her to the hospital. She described in detail her injuries, her hospitalization, her pain and suffering, her expenses and continuing disability, which it will not be necessary to discuss here.

Plaintiff having just moved to the premises, was not familiar with the walkway but later learned through examination and use of the walk that it was very slick [501]*501when wet with dew, rain or snow, and different in this respect from an ordinary concrete walk. The green marble is shown to have an especially slippery surface and when wet it is described as being just like glass. She filed as Exhibits 1 and 2 to her testimony two photographs, of the walkway and identified the spot where she fell as the. green slab on the right side of the walk and identified the shiny spot on the green slab in Exhibit 1 as the reflection of her front porch light which was on when that photograph was taken.

Mr. Albert Bowen testified that he was out walking his dog when he heard Mrs. Stephens cry for help. He came and found her down in the snow and called an ambulance to take her to the hospital.

Mr. Forrest Allen testified that he was the owner of the Forrest Alien Tile Company; that he had been in the tile.and marble, business.for many years, which business included the laying of inside and outside floors. He testified that marble is not suitable material for outside floors, particularly polished marble which is slick, and which is more slippery when wet with rain or snow. He examined the walk at 701 Crescent Hoad when it was dry and also when it was wet and identified Exhibits 1 and 2 as being photographs' of the walk. He also described the walk as, being made of scrap marble and identified the dark green slab as Yerde Antique marble, which type he kept in stock and was familiar with. He testified that Yerde Antique is a polished marble, is very hard and suitable for exterior store fronts but not normally used for floors or walks. He also testified that this type of marble would not be affected by exposure to weather and would remain slick and that a marble walkway is more slippery than brie made of concrete, especially when wet; that the Yerde [502]*502Antique slab in this walkway was more slippery than tbe rest of tbe walkway. He tested it for slipperiness wben wet and wben dry but be bad not seen tbe walk with snow on it.

Mrs. Rita Vogel testified that she and her family were tenants of tbe downstairs apartment at 701 Crescent Road and bad lived there since September, 1965. She bad noticed that tbe walk was slick wben wet and, therefore, seldom used it but walked through tbe grass instead. She also stated: “Well, it is a marble walk. I am aware that marble, wben wet, is dangerous. ’ ’ She went out and saw Mrs. Stephens after she bad fallen in tbe snow but did not remember bow deep tbe snow was.

Tbe deposition of Dr. Andrew Miller, an orthopedic surgeon, was read wherein be described plaintiff’s injuries but this need not be repeated here.

Tbe plaintiff called Mrs. Nancy Hutton as a witness, and, upon objection to her testimony by tbe defendant, tbe Court excused tbe jury and allowed her to be examined in tbe absence of tbe jury. After she bad finished testifying tbe Court excluded her testimony in its entirety and this is assigned as error.

In tbe absence of tbe jury she testified that her husband bad owned tbe duplex at 701 Crescent Road and she bad lived there with her children from 1961 until August 1965; that there bad been no change in tbe walk during tbe period she lived there; that tbe walk was more slippery than regular concrete and that she bad slipped and fallen on it several times while walking down from tbe street to the bouse; that it was more slippery wben wet than wben dry and that tbe dark green pieces of marble were more slick than tbe other slabs; that she did [503]*503not remember whether she had fallen when there was snow on the walk or not but that she had fallen on the walk more than once.

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Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.2d 673, 58 Tenn. App. 497, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-murphree-tennctapp-1968.