Swenson v. Slawik

53 N.W.2d 107, 236 Minn. 403, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 25, 1952
Docket35,651
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 107 (Swenson v. Slawik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swenson v. Slawik, 53 N.W.2d 107, 236 Minn. 403, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 670 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

*405 Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

Action to recover for injuries sustained by plaintiff while operating a. freight elevator in the Midway Building, 1951 University avenue, St. Paul, owned and maintained by defendant. At the close of the testimony, the trial court denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and submitted the case to the jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendant appeals from the judgment entered after denial of his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

On December 24, 1948, the date of the accident, the Midway Building contained a restaurant situated on the basement level toward the rear and east side of the building operated by defendant’s lessee, William Hawn. It was comprised of several rooms. One of the rooms opened into a portion of the basement, which was devoted to general service of the building, and into a corridor which led to a freight elevator in the northwest corner. The elevator and the ground-level and basement-level doors thereto provided a means of access to the basement corridor and thence to the restaurant.

The ground-level opening, 7x7 feet in area, was covered with a heavy corrugated steel door comprised of ’ two sections, divided horizontally through the center, and suspended by means of chains, sprockets, and counterbalances so as to open or close upon the application of manual force to either section. Attached to the lower side of the upper section and on the inside thereof was an iron strip one-fourth of an inch in width.

In addition to the ground-level door, the elevator opened into the remaining floors of the building. All building tenants, including several in the basement, used it and the described openings as a means of ingress and egress for themselves and for deliverymen delivering merchandise to their respective premises. Defendant employed a maintenance man to keep the elevator and the service areaway and corridors near it in repair. At various times this employe was required to remove freight left on the elevator for delivery to tenants.

*406 Within the elevator and on the building walls near its door at the basement level were signs reading:

“NOTICE
“This elevator must not be used unless George Chinock caretaker operates same”

The caretaker named had not been in charge of the building or in the employ of defendant for some time prior to the accident. He was unknown to defendant and to defendant’s lessees. There was testimony that the elevator was operated by whoever had occasion to use it with the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant’s maintenance man, and that no one employed by defendant was ever present on any occasion to operate it for tenants or deliverymen requiring its use.

Plaintiff, a garbage collector, for about two years prior to the accident had periodically removed the garbage from the restaurant under an oral agreement with the owner. This agreement required that he make approximately three calls a week for this purpose. On the occasion of the first three or four trips, he used a side area-way staircase which led from the first floor to the basement, but had been requested at that time by a prior lessee to discontinue this practice because of its interference with restaurant customers. Thereafter he entered the restaurant via the ground-level door, thence via the elevator to the basement level through the elevator door there, and along the corridors to the restaurant service room. He used the elevator to take the cans containing the garbage from the basement to the ground-level floor. He then carried them through the door above described to his truck, and used the same route in returning the empty cans to the restaurant. He had used this route with the knowledge and acquiescence of the restaurant owner and of defendant’s maintenance man throughout the two years of his contract, and had never been ordered by anyone to discontinue it.

A week or two prior to the accident a web strap, which hung on the inside of the upper section of the ground-level door for use in *407 closing the door, had been partially removed. A metal handle on this section used for the same purpose had been bent flush against the door so as to render it useless. On the day of the accident, on the occasion of one of his return trips to the basement with the empty garbage cans, plaintiff attempted, in the absence of the described closing devices, to close the ground-level door by pulling downward on the iron strip attached to the lower side of the upper section. The door had become tightly lodged, so that plaintiff was required to exert extra pressure to close it. Upon exerting such extra pressure, the door closed abruptly and the iron strip came down upon the thumb of his right hand, crushing and injuring it so that a part of it had to be amputated.

About a week prior to the accident plaintiff discovered that part of the web strap was missing. It had been removed by defendant’s maintenance man in order to prevent strangers from gaining access to the building through the ground-level elevator entrance — an action made possible by grasping the strap from the outside as it fell and hung through the door. For approximately a week before the accident it was difficult to close the door because of its becoming tightly lodged when open. Accordingly, greater manual pressure was required to close it. Although plaintiff was familiar with these conditions, he had been forbidden to use the other entrances to the basement in the performance of his work; as a result, this left him only the described means of access thereto. He had closed the door in the manner described at least 12 or 15 times during the week prior to the accident and had suffered no injury in connection therewith.

On appeal, defendant contends that as a matter of law (1) no duty was owing by him to plaintiff to maintain the elevator in a reasonably safe condition; (2) if such a duty did exist, plaintiff failed to prove any breach thereof; and (3) plaintiff at the time of the accident had assumed the risk or was guilty of contributory negligence.

There is a presumption that a landlord retains control over portions of his premises used in common by different lessees of his *408 property. Such control may be established by direct evidence thereof or by reasonable inferences drawn from the circumstances present. Iverson v. Quam, 226 Minn. 290, 32 N. W. (2d) 596; Rasmussen v. George Benz & Sons, 168 Minn. 819, 210 N. W. 75, 212 N. W. 20; Rose v. Mooers Brothers Inc. 161 Minn. 149, 201 N. W. 303; Barrett v. Lumber Exchange Co. 159 Minn. 326, 198 N. W. 804; Williams v. Dickson, 122 Minn. 49, 141 N. W. 849; Farley v. Byers, 106 Minn. 260, 118 N. W. 1023. Here, the evidence discloses that the elevator, its entrances, and the areas immediately adjacent thereto were used in common by defendant’s tenants as a means of access to the basement. It also established that defendant employed a man to maintain the premises thus reserved and to keep them in repair. All this would seem sufficient to sustain a finding that defendant was in actual control of these facilities at the time of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 107, 236 Minn. 403, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swenson-v-slawik-minn-1952.