Telak v. Maszczenski

237 A.2d 434, 248 Md. 476, 1968 Md. LEXIS 674
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1968
Docket[No. 663, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 237 A.2d 434 (Telak v. Maszczenski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telak v. Maszczenski, 237 A.2d 434, 248 Md. 476, 1968 Md. LEXIS 674 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There was a swimming party at the Maszczenskis’ on 4 July 1962. Some 40 to 50 friends and relatives had been invited to *479 celebrate the birthday of Mrs. Maszczenski’s sister, Helen Gajewski. Among the guests were the appellant (Telak), his wife and 7 year old son. They arrived at the Maszczenski home in Pikesville, Baltimore County, around 1:00 p.m. At about 4:30 p.m. tall, husky, 35 year old Telak mounted the diving board, dove into the pool and struck his head against the bottom. Face down, he floated to the surface, paralyzed and “in terrific pain.” Ever since he has been a quadriplegic, helpless and utterly without hope. On 7 May 19'63 he sued the Maszczenskis, Van Dorn (who sold the pool), and Bacharach (architects and professional engineers). On 9 February 1966 trial began before Jenifer, J., and a jury, in the Baltimore County Circuit Court. After 9 days of trial the plaintiff concluded his case whereupon all defendants moved for directed verdicts. At this juncture Judge Jenifer fell ill. The parties chose not to wait for his recovery. They agreed to continue before the same jury and Judge Proctor to whom was read all of the testimony and who read all of the pleadings and examined all of the exhibits. Judge Proctor heard argument on the motions for several days and on 3 March he directed the entry of verdicts in favor of all of the defendants. We agree, regretfully, that his decision was correct.

There was a time when swimming pools were appurtenances of the well-to-do. During the past 10 years, however, private residential pools have become both inexpensive and commonplace. In Baltimore County alone, the evidence reveals, 419 private pools were installed between 1956 and 1959. The Maszczenski pool is a fiberglass shell 35 feet long and 15 feet wide. Its maximum depth is 7 feet below the ground level. Its 5 preformed sections, each 7 feet long, were manufactured in Florida by Delorich, Inc. They were delivered to Maszczenski (also called Tony) in the late summer of 1959, arriving in a truck bearing a Florida license. Maszczenski was present during the unloading.

It was shown that at least one other company, from 1955 to 1961, manufactured and marketed identical pools in at least 4 states, including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, where they were approved for use in residences and small motels. When Van Dorn began selling the Delorich pools in 1955 the county authorities required the pool to be approved by an *480 architect. Van Dorn engaged Bacharach to do whatever was necessary in this regard. The county engineering authorities, in 1956, approved the drawings developed by Bacharach.

Two blocks from the Maszczenski home, a neighbor had installed a Delorich pool. Except that it was 7 feet (one section) shorter it was identical with the Maszczenski pool. Along with his brother-in-law, Thomas Gajewski, he visited the property, examined the pool and discussed it with his neighbor for several hours. Shortly thereafter he bought the pool from Van Dorn. Gajewski (on behalf of Maszczenski) applied for the required building permit, submitting with his application copies of Bacharach drawings which had been approved by county authorities in 1956. The zoning, engineering and health officials approved the application (including the Bacharach drawings), and the permit was issued on 5 August 1959.

Maszczenski employed Gajewski to supervise the installation of the pool. Gajewski was a maintenance man at the Bethlehem Steel plant. He could read blueprints and he had built 3 or 4 houses, including his own. When the excavation was finished Gajewski glued the 5 sections together, embedded the shell in the ground and filled it with water. By the end of the year all of the work was finished except for the laying of the tile walkway around the edge of the pool. This was accomplished in the summer of 1960 with the help of Telak who knew “how to lay tile” whereas Gajewski did not. They were close friends, “just like brothers.” Gajewski explained to Telak how he had put it all together. Since Delorich did not provide a diving board with the pool, Gajewski procured one from another source and installed it for Maszczenski.

Maszczenski’s maintenance of his pool was such that it “was crystal clear — at all times.” “It was very clear” on 4 July 1962. The pool had been used by Maszczenski’s 4 daughters and others all during the .spring, summer and early fall of 1960 and 1961, and during spring and early summer of 1962. Judge Jenifer refused to let Maszczenski answer questions as to whether any one had ever been injured in the pool but his brother Chester, who works for him and who used the pool from time to time, was allowed to say that, prior to Telak’s injury, he had no knowledge of any injuries to anyone using the *481 pool. An expert witness produced by Telak admitted that no one, including counsel for Telak, had informed him that, between 1956 and 1961, 18 identical pools with similar diving boards had been installed in Baltimore County and adjoining counties, and “that no word of any injuries in any of those pools” had ever come to the dealer who sold them. The appellees stress Telak’s admission that no pool of the type here involved has ever been proven to be “dangerous or hazardous.”

Chester testified that once in July 1961 he dove from the diving board and as he “came out of * * * [his] dive and took a stroke, * * * [he] brushed the ledge of the pool, the upgrade of the pool” with his forehead. He was “not in any way injured.” There were no “marks of any kind on” him. He stayed in the water and “kept on fooling around” with his brother, Michael. Eater on he “casually mentioned” to Tony that he “had touched bottom.”

Telak, in his original declaration, described himself as “an expert swimmer and athletic in build.” When he was a “kid” he dove from the piers into Baltimore harbor. As he grew older he continued to swim and dive in pools in Baltimore and at Air Force bases in this country and abroad. Additional experience was gained over the years in the ocean at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Ocean City, Maryland, Wildwood and Atlantic City, New Jersey and in the Chesapeake Bay and the Santee and Columbia rivers in South Carolina. He swam frequently from the pier of a neighbor at Rock Creek (in Anne Arundel County) where the water varied in depth from 6 inches to 12 feet and where one cannot see the bottom except in shallow water.

Telak stood near the pool and watched his son during much of the time the boy was in the water. It was close to 4:30 p.m. when he and Gajewski put on bathing trunks and walked to the shallow end of the pool where the water was from 3 to 4 feet deep. Telak said he had never before been in the pool. After looking to see if there were any children in the way he “just shoved off” in a “shallow dive” toward the deep end of the pool. When he stood up he was in about 4 feet of water. He swam over to where his son was standing, spoke to him, *482 went to the ladder and climbed out of the pool. The ladder was about midway on one side where the water was waist deep. He walked to the diving board, intending, he said, to dive so that he could go the length of the pool under water and surface near his son at the shallow end.

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237 A.2d 434, 248 Md. 476, 1968 Md. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telak-v-maszczenski-md-1968.