Wilson v. Kopp

250 P.2d 166, 114 Cal. App. 2d 198, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1158
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1952
DocketCiv. 15184
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 166 (Wilson v. Kopp) 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
Wilson v. Kopp, 250 P.2d 166, 114 Cal. App. 2d 198, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1158 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Plaintiff brought this action for damages for the loss of an eye alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendants. The jury, by a 10 to 2 vote, brought in a verdict for defendants. Plaintiff appeals from the judg *200 ment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. In civil cases the order denying a motion for a new trial is not independently appealable, bnt is reviewable on the appeal from the'judgment. The independent appeal from such order must therefore be dismissed.

Plaintiff, regularly employed by Pan American Airways as a flight steward, was a regular patron of the Baywood Café in San Mateo, which is owned and operated by defendants. The café has a shuffleboard for the use of its patrons, and plaintiff had used it prior to the accident. This shuffleboard was located to the right of the entrance to the café and parallel to the bar. The shuffleboard is 23 feet long and 18 inches wide and has eight legs. The playing surface is surrounded by gutters on both sides, the outer side of the gutters being 2 inches higher than the board.

On Monday, September 13, 1948, at about 5:15 p. m. plaintiff arrived at the café intending to participate in a shuffleboard tournament to be held that evening. Shortly after he arrived, McGarry, one of the proprietors of the café and one 'of the defendants herein, began attaching with screws towel racks to the side of the shuffleboard closest to the bar. This side of the shuffleboard is about 5 or 6 feet from the bar. While this was going on, plaintiff, who wanted to have a game with McGarry, and one Zubick, took a few practice shots on the table and then went to the bar for a bottle of beer. During this period McGarry and plaintiff engaged in some friendly banter over how hard the wood was into which McGarry, with some difficulty, was trying to insert the screws. Plaintiff testified that McGarry then handed him the screwdriver with the comment “If you think you can do it better-” McGarry testified that plaintiff said “Well, let me have a try at it, ’ ’ whereupon McGarry put the screwdriver on the board and plaintiff picked it up. The facts from this point on until the time of the accident are in hopeless conflict. Plaintiff testified that he took a position at the side of the board standing erect with his left foot in front of his right and grasping the screwdriver in his right hand; that he had taken about two turns with the screwdriver when both of his feet simultaneously slipped backwards out from under him because of the slippery floor; that he tried to regain his balance but fell across the shuffleboard on his chest, and that the screwdriver, which he was still holding, pierced his eyeball, which resulted in the loss of that eye. One Webber testified that sometime after the accident he was talking to McGarry and Kopp (the *201 other defendant) and that one of them stated that plaintiff “slipped and the screwdriver jabbed him in the eye.” Kopp admitted making such a statement, but declared that it was based on what someone else had told him. This weak admission, if admission it is, is the only testimony directly corroborating plaintiff’s story that the slipping of his feet caused the accident.

It was the theory of defendants that plaintiff’s feet did not slip upon the floor, but that as he started to use the screwdriver he braced one foot on the bar rail in back of him and had one foot on the floor when the screwdriver slipped upward, into his eye, scratching the board as it came up. Lisabeth Kopp, wife of defendant Kopp, so testified. On cross-examination she admitted that when plaintiff’s motion forward occurred she could see but one foot of plaintiff, but she was positive that that foot did not slip or leave the floor. The other, foot was braced against the bar rail.

Me Garry also testified that when plaintiff first started to use the screwdriver he stated “I don’t have enough beef on it,” whereupon he braced one foot against the bar rail. This bar rail, of course, projected out from the base of the bar.

The son of defendant Kopp, then about 12 years of age, was standing about 2 feet from plaintiff. He testified that plaintiff’s feet did not slip, that just prior to the accident plaintiff braced one foot on the bar rail and the screwdriver slipped when pressure was applied. The witness Zubick, who was called by the plaintiff, after the accident had told an investigator employed by defendants that' the accident was caused by the screwdriver slipping. Zubick admitted making the statement, but testified that he was under the influence of liquor when it was made. This was denied by the investigator.

In rebuttal plaintiff reiterated that his feet and not the screwdriver slipped, and also testified as to an experiment he had made at the café after the first day of trial. He stated that if one of his feet had been braced against the bar rail, his body would have been so extended that he could not possibly have fallen across the shuffleboard at the time of the accident, but would have fallen to the floor. All the evidence is to the effect that plaintiff fell across the shuffleboard and did not fall to the floor.

Thus on the issue as to how the accident happened, that is, whether caused by plaintiff’s feet slipping on the slippery floor or whether caused by the screwdriver slipping, the evidence *202 was in. sharp and irreconcilable conflict. This is equally true as to the evidence relating to whether or not there was wax on the floor, and whether or not defendants knew or should have known of the presence of such wax. The plaintiff, who was familiar with the premises, stated that he saw nothing different in the condition of the floor on the day of the accident than existed on other occasions. Admittedly, wax is constantly used to polish with an electric buffer the surface of the shuffleboard. Excess wax was either brushed off the board or collected with a vacuum cleaner. The pucks used in the game would slide off the board and bring some wax with them so that wax would collect in the gutters. There were unplugged holes in the gutters through which the excess wax would be pushed into a receptacle below. There was one such open hole a very short distance—18 to 20 inches, according to plaintiff, or 12 to 15 inches, according to Kopp— from the. bracket upon which plaintiff was working when the accident happened. Wax was also kept available for the players. They would dip a towel into the wax and then use the towel to wipe off excess moisture from their hands. Wax would thus fall on the floor unless the hands were wiped over the board. The brackets on the sides of the board were being installed to hold these towels which were furnished by the pafé. The towels were also used to wipe off the board and to wipe the wax out of the gutters. McGarry admitted that wax could fall through the holes onto the floor. Witness Zubick testified that the floor was slippery the night of the accident, and that about a month before the accident he told either Kopp or McGarry that the floor was slick, and that “somebody is going to break their neck on that floor.” He also testified, however, that the slippery condition was caused by the fact that the entire floor was waxed and not because of wax falling from the shuffleboard, and that he did not know of any other person who had slipped. Witness Webber testified that he examined the area around the board at 6 p. m. the night of the accident, which had occurred at 5:15 p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 166, 114 Cal. App. 2d 198, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-kopp-calctapp-1952.