Stewart v. Lido Cafe

56 P.2d 553, 13 Cal. App. 2d 46
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1936
DocketCiv. 1394
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 553 (Stewart v. Lido Cafe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Lido Cafe, 56 P.2d 553, 13 Cal. App. 2d 46 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action for damages for the death of Harvey J. Stewart. A motion for a nonsuit having been denied the defendants rested without introducing evidence and moved for a directed verdict, which motion was denied as was also a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff the defendants have appealed.

The appellants were operating a restaurant and bar in Bakersfield known as Lido Cafe, and the injuries which resulted in the death of Stewart were caused by his falling down a stairway on those premises on October 19, 1933. The Lido Cafe faces south and is divided by a partition running north and south. The western portion is occupied by the restaurant from which swinging doors give access to the bar, which occupies the front end of the eastern portion.

An understanding of the points raised requires a description of this eastern portion. This portion has a front of 19 feet and a depth of about 80 feet and is divided into what may be called three rooms. The front room, used as a bar, is approximately 19 feet by 22% feet. Its north wall goes to the ceiling and entrance to the middle room is by a door at the west end of this wall and to the left as one faces the rear of the building. The middle room is approximately 19 feet by 44 feet in size. To the rear of this is what may be called another room although the partition between the two is only 6% feet high while the ceiling is 17 feet high. Entrance to this third room is by a door at the west end of this partition, near the left wall of the room as you face the rear. This third room is 19 feet wide and about 11 feet in depth. In the northwest corner of this room is an offset 3%x4 feet in size, the walls of which go to the ceiling, and in which there is a *49 toilet the door to which is in the east wall of the offset. As one enters this third room through the door referred to he faces the south wall of this offset, and sees ahead of him a sink along the lower part of the wall and above that, beginning about seven feet from the floor, a grill-work with wire in front of it which is similar in construction to an air conveyor. Along the east wall of the portion of the building we are describing is another offset which is partly in the middle room and partly in the third room. The walls of this offset are 12 feet high and the top is covered. This offset is about 12 feet long and 4y2 feet wide. It encloses a stairway to the basement. The entrance to this stairway is by a door in the north end of this offset, near the northeast comer of the third room. On the occasion in question there was no light in this toilet and no light in this third room, although this room received some light over the partition from a light near the center of the middle room. The first person to enter this room after the deceased was injured, testified: “You could see to get around but it was rather faint.”

On the evening in question the deceased dined with a party of friends in this restaurant. About 8 o’clock he went through the door into the barroom, where two of his friends were standing at the bar. He asked the bartender, who was an employee of the appellants, the way to the lavatory and received the reply: 1 ‘ Down the end of the hall to the left. ’ ’ He then told his friends he would see them in a minute and started to the rear of the premises through the door in the northwest corner of the barroom. Shortly thereafter the bartender heard a noise and said to Mr. Jones, a friend of the deceased: “ I think your friend fell back there. ’ ’ Jones went back and found the deceased injured at the foot of the stairway leading to the basement. Jones testified that when he went back there was no light in the third room or the toilet; that after he entered through the door he proceeded to about the center of the room and at that point looked back over his shoulder and “I could see by the faint glow the bowl of the lavatory;” that he then had his back to the offset which contained the toilet; that he then proceeded to the other or east side of the room where he found the door to the stairway open; that he could see the opening but could see nothing beyond the opening itself; and that he found Stewart at the bottom of this stairway. It is conceded that the door to the *50 basement was not locked and that there were no signs either of direction or warning in either of these rooms. One of the appellants, when asked if this lavatory was maintained for the use of patrons, replied: “Not necessarily for patrons, it was more for employees than patrons.” She then testified that nevertheless it was used by patrons quite often and that her employees often directed patrons back there, and that there was another toilet off the dining room.

The appellants contend that the deceased, in entering this stairway, was a mere licensee and not an invitee. The jury has impliedly found that he was an invitee and the essential question is whether there is any evidence to support such a finding. In Corbett v. Spanos, 37 Cal. App. 200 [173 Pac. 769], the court said:

“The law of California as to the duties owing by a proprietor of a store to his customers and to the public is settled by the cases of Schmidt v. Bauer, 80 Cal. 565 [22 Pac. 256, 5 L. R. A. 580]; Means v. Southern California Ry. Co., 144 Cal. 473 [77 Pac. 1001, 1 Ann. Cas. 206] ; Herzog v. Hemphill, 7 Cal. App. 116 [93 Pac. 899]. It is well expressed in the following quotation from Schmidt v. Bauer, supra: ‘The keeper of a public place of business is bound to keep his premises and the passageways to and from it in safe condition, and use ordinary care to avoid accidents or injury to those properly entering upon his premises on business. But this rule only applies to such parts of the building as are a part of or used to gain access to, or constitute a passageway to and from, the business portion of the building, and not to such parts of the building as are used for the private purposes of the owner, unless the party injured has been induced by the invitation or allurement of the owner, express or implied, to enter therein. ’ ”

The invitation of a proprietor extends not only to all parts of the premises which the patron is expressly invited to use but also to such parts as he is impliedly invited to enter. (Schmidt v. Bauer, 80 Cal. 565 [22 Pac. 256, 5 L. R. A. 580].) The invitation also extends to those portions of the premises where the invitee under the circumstances and conditions of his invitation would naturally be likely to go. (Bush v. Weed Lumber Co., 63 Cal. App. 426 [218 Pac. 618].) Such an invitation may be manifested by the arrangement of *51 the premises as well as the conduct of the proprietor. (Herzog v. Hemphill, 7 Cal. App. 116 [93 Pac. 899].)

The appellants argue that the rules laid down in Herzog v. Hemphill, supra, Corbett v. Spanos, supra, Schmidt v. Bauer, supra, and Medcraft v. Merchants’ Exchange, 211 Cal. 404 [295 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 553, 13 Cal. App. 2d 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-lido-cafe-calctapp-1936.