The Scott-Burr Stores Corp. v. Foster

122 S.W.2d 165, 197 Ark. 232, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
Docket4-5263
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 165 (The Scott-Burr Stores Corp. v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Scott-Burr Stores Corp. v. Foster, 122 S.W.2d 165, 197 Ark. 232, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 349 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Baker, J.

The Scott-Burr Stores Corporation was sued by Mrs. Ida Foster for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained on the 10th day of December, 1937. She was employed in the store or business house of the appellant in the city of Hope, Hempstead county, Arkansas. It was alleged that prior to the time of her injury she was strong and able-bodied, in good health, with steady nerves and that the injury she suffered had resulted in permanent physical disability to such an extent that she was then wholly incapacitated. She had worked as a saleslady in the mercantile business operated by the appellant as extra help for a period of approximately a year. She, no doubt, was possessed with that degree of familiarity with the store and fixtures, and surroundings as might have been expected of one so employed for the time. The business house of the appellant is described as a one-story building, facing south, in the rear or north end of which is an upper floor or decking, called a balcony, upon which is located an office department and storage places for goods, fixtures and furniture, or appliances not in actual use. This second floor or balcdny is reached by a stairway, one side of which rests against the north wall of the building, perhaps about four or five feet wide. At the top of the stairway and to the' side, away from the wall, there is a bannister, supported by uprights about four feet high. Boards are placed on top this bannister, reaching across or over the stairway so that the end of the boards next to the wall rested upon a cleat or piece of timber fastened to the wall as a support for the boards, which when so placed constituted or made a shelf upon which numerous articles had been placed or stored. Among these articles there were chalk or plaster of paris statuettes, supports for goods placed in or under counters called shams. These shams were made of wood and cardboard and were employed when in use as temporary or false shelves under counters or on counters, or at such places as it was desired to make use of them, for the purpose of stacking or placing goods thereon.

At the time Mrs. Foster was hurt, she had been sent to this balcony floor to get some paper clips for use in tagging merchandise. Descending the stairway some objects that had been placed or piled.upon this shelf over the stairway fell from it, struck her on the right side of the head, just above the ear, glanced off striking her shoulder and falling to the floor. It is probably not positively known whether the object which struck her was one of the shams, a loose board or one of the statuettes. Someone picked up from the floor shortly thereafter one or more of the shams. It is said that some of the statuettes also fell. The blow from which she suffered was not sufficient to knock her down, but she was so badly hurt that she stopped for a few minutes on the stairway to recover from the shock and then returned to the place where she had been working. She was sent out with another lady to a doctor’s office for treatment of the rather severe wound on the side of her head. The doctor described the wound as being cut to the bone or pe-riosteum. He treated the wound by sterilizing and by applying clips so as to draw the edges of the cut together. No treatment was given to the shoulder or arm at the time, but there was administered to her a shot in order to avoid the development of tetanus. She returned to her work and remained there until late in the afternoon when she was called away on account of the illness of her father, who died a day or two thereafter. ‘On account of his illness and death she did not return to the store for about a week. At the time she returned her arm and shoulder were very sore and somewhat swollen. She had with her some liniment or lotion which she applied or had rubbed on by one of her fellow employees. It is alleged that she grew worse, returned to her home where she was confined for several weks. Upon trial of this case she was awarded a verdict for $3,000. The appeal comes from the verdict and consequent judgment.

For her cause of action she alleges that the defendant did not use ordinary care to furnish her a reasonably safe place within which to work. In addition to a general denial the defendant pleaded assumption of risk.

Defendant insisted that the court should have directed a verdict in its favor for the reason that the evidence was not sufficient to show negligence. The defendant, also, urged that there was error in giving instructions Nos. 1, 2 and 5. It was also urged that the verdict was excessive.

Only because of the most earnest insistence on the part of the appellant that the evidence is not sufficient to show actionable negligence do we mention this matter at all. The appellant, however, argues that if there were objects so placed upon the shelving above the stairway that they fell therefrom, that fact in itself is not evidence of negligence without some showing that such objects had been so placed or located for a sufficient length of time that they must have been observed by the management of the store or that, in the exercise of ordinary care, a presumption arises that they could or should have been seen. We do not agree with this theory of the appellant. The evidence shows that this shelf is above the stairway, the only passageway by which one might go from one floor to the other, that if any object should fall from this shelf almost of necessity it must fall upon the stairway. There is no evidence of the insecurity of the stairway or bannister, or shelfing above it. So far as the evidence is concerned in that respect we must and do presume that the stairway was steady and that in the normal use of it there was nothing to loosen, disturb or shake objects placed upon the shelf so as to cause them to fall. This was a place, so far as the evidence shows, not open to public use, but resorted to only by the employees of the company. When objects were placed upon this shelf over the stairway, if they were not so placed or stacked thereon that they would not fall from that particular location, then the servant or employee handling such articles must be deemed to have been negligent and if there was no rack, and the evidence does not show any, to prevent the falling of such articles carelessly or negligently placed at or near the edge of this shelf, then there should have been such constant inspection as ordinary prudence would require to maintain at least reasonable safety. We think the jury might well have found that if those who used the stairway, or those who placed or stored or stacked articles upon this overhead shelving had exercised ordinary care in so doing there would have been a practical impossibility for objects to fall therefrom. It is not necessary to point out, or even to know or suspect what particular servant or agent may have been negligent. It was within reasonable requirements of the defendant company that it exercise ordinary care to keep this place reasonable safe for those who must in the performance of their duties use the stairway. The insistence, oil the part of the appellant, that there is no evidence from which it could be assumed or inferred that the particular shams that fell from the open shelf above the stairway had been in the dangerous position or ready to fall for any length of time before they actually fell upon the appellee is not tenable as a defense.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 165, 197 Ark. 232, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-scott-burr-stores-corp-v-foster-ark-1938.