Wills v. Price

79 P.2d 406, 26 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1048
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1938
DocketCiv. 2214
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 406 (Wills v. Price) 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
Wills v. Price, 79 P.2d 406, 26 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1048 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

HAINES, J., pro tem.

For a long time appellants Fred S. Price, B. L. Price and Kathleen M. Warden have been engaged, under the fictitious name “Price Hardware and Furniture Company”, in conducting a hardware and furniture store in a two-story building at Porterville. The building was erected in 1890. A room on the second floor has been and was, on October 25, 1935, used for storage and display of linoleum in rolls. Many of these rolls were of six-foot wide linoleum which were placed on end along the south side of the room. Other rolls of nine-foot wide linoleum, and sometimes of linoleum of even greater width, were laid on the floor. Between the rolls which stood on end and those laid on the floor there was an aisle or pathway extending across the room. There is evidence to the effect that the structural conditions of the building-had not been changed after it was put up except that one of the steel uprights, formerly existing as a support to a girder beneath a portion of the upper floor, including the linoleum room, had been removed, resulting, according to the testimony of one Nyby, a building contractor, in a sag, leaving this part of the upper floor uneven and sloping from both the south and north walls toward the center. The result, according to this witness, is a perceptible vibration when one walks across this floor. Two other witnesses, a building contractor named Bishop and the city building inspector, one Hamilton, testified that they are familiar with the building and that walking across this floor produces a perceptible vibration. The testimony of appellant Fred S. Price and of *340 one Hopkins, an employee of appellants, as well as of various others, is that they have noticed no such vibration from that cause, though Price says that it does occur when trucks of linoleum are rolled along the floor. Nyby testified that while he. considered the building all right as a whole he thought this part of it unsafe. On the day referred to plaintiff and respondent Lydia E. Wills, together with her daughter, Yera Mortensen, went to the store and Mrs. Wills went upstairs and looked at a roll of linoleum which she decided to buy for her daughter. After going below she returned again with her daughter to the linoleum room to show to her daughter the roll which she had selected and, according to her testimony, after it had been examined, the two walked along the aisle or pathway, above referred to, between the rolls of six-foot linoleum standing on end and the rolls of wider linoleum lying on the floor until, as they were nearing the center of the line of upright rolls one of these, weighing from 120 to 125 pounds, amounting to only about one-third of its original weight, fell, hitting Mrs. Wills and throwing her across a roll of nine-foot linoleum lying on the floor on the opposite side of the aisle, causing her severe injuries, including a fractured hip. There is some testimony to an admission on Mrs. Wills’ part that she had placed her hand on the top of this particular roll of linoleum to look behind it and see other patterns, whereupon it fell over on her, but she denied making any such admission and testified that she did not put her hand on the roll and we must,, in support of the trial court’s action, assume that it believed her testimony on that subject to be true.

On the other hand, there is testimony that one of the defendants admitted that the linoleum that fell on Mrs. Wills had been rolled into a spiral form and stood on its smaller end. Not only is this admission denied but appellants claim that to stand on end a roll of linoleum in such a condition at all would be physically impossible.

The present action was brought by respondents, Mrs. Wills and her husband, to recover from, appellants general damages for the injuries so sustained by Mrs. Wills, as well as special damages for expenses incurred in treating them, and for loss to the husband of the wife’s services, all of which are in the amended complaint claimed to have resulted from appellants’ negligence. Defendants and appellants are alleged, *341 in each of the two counts of the amended complaint, to have been negligent, in that, for the purpose of displaying it to their invitees and customers, “said linoleum had been by said defendants negligently and carelessly rolled and stood upon end and negligently and carelessly permitted to remain on the floor in such manner that the same could and did, as a result of the vibration caused by walking across said floor, or other vibrations of said building, fall upon and strike the plaintiff, causing her to be thrown to the floor and upon another roll of linoleum carelessly and negligently by the defendants permitted to remain lying upon the floor in such position or place that plaintiff could be and was thrown thereon”. After the filing of an answer denying the negligence complained of and alleging contributory negligence on Mrs. Wills’ part, the case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants, whereupon the plaintiffs and respondents moved the court for a new trial on the two grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict and errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by plaintiffs. The motion was granted, as the court’s minutes recite, “on all of the grounds set forth in the written motion for a new trial”, and it is from the order granting the motion that the present appeal is taken.

Appellants concede that on an appeal from an order granting a new trial this court may not review mere conflicts in the evidence but they rely on the circumstance that, instead of alleging negligence generally, the amended complaint specifies, as above set out, the particular negligence claimed to have existed, and, as is claimed, is to be treated as though it alleged in substance that “the linoleum was rolled and placed on end so that it would safely stand where it was placed unless there should be vibration of the floor caused from walking across the floor or other vibration of the building”. Appellants claim that as a legal consequence, all applicability of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur to the case is necessarily excluded and that plaintiffs cannot recover without showing both that the linoleum was so negligently placed that vibration would cause it to fall and also that there was in fact in this particular instance vibration which did cause it to fall. As said in Marovich v. Central California T. Co., 191 Cal. 295, 305 [216 Pac. 595]:

*342 “The general rule is that ‘where the plaintiff in his complaint gives the explanation of the cause of the accident, that is to say, where the plaintiff instead of relying upon a general allegation of negligence, sets out specifically the negligent acts or omissions complained of, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply’. (Connor v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 189 Cal. 1 [22 A. L. R 1462, 207 Pac. 378], and cases cited.) The foregoing statement of the rule in the cited ease was followed by the qualification that ‘where the explanation leaves it doubtful as to whether or not the ultimate cause of the injury is the negligence of the party charged, it is proper to instruct the jury as to the res ipsa loquitur doctrine’.”

The court says further (citing numerous authorities from the decisions in this state) that:

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 406, 26 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wills-v-price-calctapp-1938.