Watterlund v. Billings

23 A.2d 540, 112 Vt. 256, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 6, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 540 (Watterlund v. Billings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watterlund v. Billings, 23 A.2d 540, 112 Vt. 256, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 111 (Vt. 1942).

Opinion

Moulton, C. J.

This is an action in tort to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the acts of the defendants’ employees. The verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff and the cause is here on the defendants’ exceptions.

The first of these concerns the denial of a motion for a directed verdict, made upon the grounds that the evidence failed to show actionable negligence on the part of either or both of the defendants, that it conclusively appeared that the plaintiff was eontributorily negligent, and that she assumed the risk of injury.

Taking the evidence in the most favorable light for the plaintiff, and excluding the effect of modifying evidence, as we must when the question arises upon a defendant’s motion for a verdict (Tinney v. Crosby, 112 Vt. 95, 101, 22 Atl. 2d. 145, 148), the material facts as the jury might have found them are these: The house belonging to the plaintiff’s father, in which she and her husband lived, had been sold to the defendants on February 6, 1940, and at the time of the accident was being demolished to *259 make room for the erection of a gasoline filling station. All of the household furniture had been removed from the upper floor and taken away from the premises, but on the lower floor there remained the plaintiff’s piano, cook stove, a folding cot bed, several chairs and some kitchen utensils. With the permission of the defendants, who, at the time of the sale, had assured her that there was no hurry about her moving, although early in March they asked her to move as quickly as possible, the plaintiff had been sleeping and getting her meals at the house during a part of the time since it was sold and had been there every day to superintend the removal of the furniture. She stopped spending the nights there on April 20 and thereafter employed a watchman to remain on the premises to safeguard such property as remained therein. Her presence from day to day was known to the workmen employed by the defendants in tearing down the partitions and taking up the flooring on the upper floor. On the morning of April 23, she went to the house to prepare breakfast for the watchman and herself. Two employees of the defendants were throwing boards out of the window directly over the front door or passing them to two others, who were in the front yard to receive them. When the plaintiff entered she spoke to the men upstairs, and was answered. She discovered a quantity of plaster in the front hall and, in order to prevent injury to her piano, she closed the door leading from the hall to the room in which it was kept, and then went to the front door and asked Austin Taylor, one of the men in the yard, not to drop any boards upon two barberry bushes which she had permission from the defendants to remove. Taylor told her to look out as she might be hurt because the lumber was being passed out and she stopped where she was, inside the door with the casing of the door over her head where, as she said, she did not think that she would be hit. Just as she spoke a board was passed out which was too short for Taylor to reach. The man at the window dropped it and it fell, striking the plaintiff on her left foot, and causing a laceration of the flesh and a fracture of one of the metatarsal bones which resulted in a painful and incapacitating injury.

The defendants argue that the plaintiff was a trespasser, or at most a licensee with a standing no better than that of a trespasser, hence that they can be held liable only for a *260 wilful or wanton injury, and that no act of that nature was shown to have been committed. As we have seen, the evidence tended to show that she was in the house by the permission of the defendants and it cannot be said as a matter of law, as the defendants insist, that because of the length of time that had passed since the permission was given and the subsequent request that she should move as quickly as possible, her right to be there had terminated. Assuming that she was either a trespasser or a licensee and not, as the Court ruled, a tenant at will, the rule of liability for which the defendants contend is not. in accord with the decisions of this Court. While they were not bound to keep the premises safe for her, or to warn her of their dangerous condition, they owed her the duty of active care to protect her from injuries from force negligently brought to bear upon her. Lucas v. Kelley, 102 Vt. 173, 179, 147 Atl. 281. If they or their servants knew or ought to have known of her presence it was incumbent upon them to exercise reasonable care to avoid injuring her. This is the “most humane and reasonable rule” applied in Lindsay, Admr. v. Canadian Pacific R. R. Co., 68 Vt. 556, 567, 35 Atl. 513; Seymour v. Central Vermont R. R. Co., 69 Vt. 555, 557, 38 Atl. 236; and Dent, Admr. v. Bellows Falls and Saxton’s River Street Ry. Co., 95 Vt. 523, 530, 116 Atl. 83. See, also, Restatement of Torts, Secs. 336, 341; Eldredge, Modern Tort Problems, pp. 163-186.

Although the evidence showed that the men on the upper floor could not see where the plaintiff was standing at the moment, the jury could infer that they were not only aware that she was on the premises, but, from her speaking to them, in the front part of the house and near the door. Taylor, indeed, knew just where she was and realized' the possibility of an injury to her; Whether, as a prudent man, he should have warned the other workmen before they dropped the board or under the circumstances the others should have taken steps to ascertain her presence, so that proper precautions against dropping the board in her vicinity could have been taken, were questions for the jury to determine. The issue of negligence was one of fact. It is not necessary to dwell upon the distinction between active and passive negligence suggested in Lucas v. Kelley, supra.

And so also the question of her contributory negligence *261 was for the jury, whose province it was to say whether, upon the evidence, she was in the exercise of reasonable care in standing where she said she did.

The doctrine of assumption of risk may apply where there is no contractual relation, such as that of master and servant, between the parties. Hutchinson v. Knowles, 108 Vt. 195, 206, 184 Atl. 705; Gover v. Central Vermont Ry. Co., 96 Vt. 208, 213, 118 Atl. 874. It is founded upon the maxim volenti non fit injuria and implies that the person against whom it is invoked voluntarily, that is, by the exercise of free will and intelligent choice, has put himself in the way of a danger which he knew and comprehended, or was so obvious that he must be taken to have known and comprehended it. Hutchinson v. Knowles, supra; Landing v. Town of Fairlee, 112 Vt. 127, 22 Atl. 2d. 179, 181; Tinney v. Crosly, 112 Vt. 95, 105, 22 Atl. 2d. 145, 150, and cases cited. It is clear that it cannot here be said, as a matter of law, that the risk was assumed by the plaintiff, within the rule above set forth. There was no error in the denial of the motion for a verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 540, 112 Vt. 256, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watterlund-v-billings-vt-1942.