Yturralde v. Barney's Club, Inc.
This text of 484 P.2d 1079 (Yturralde v. Barney's Club, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
By the Court,
This is an appeal from a jury’s verdict in favor of respondent-defendant Barney’s Club, Inc., and denying the claim of appellants-plaintiffs Martha V. and Oswald B. Yturralde for damages for injuries Martha suffered while standing on a stairway landing in Barney’s Club. Martha was struck by one [251]*251Richard Herman Wohlert, a patron, who was exiting the premises. Appellants have specified several assignments of error that they claim the trial judge committed during the trial. We reject all the assignments, and we affirm the verdict of the jury.
1. The Facts.
The factual background of this case is simple and brief. The appellants were patrons of Barney’s Club on the date of the accident. So was Wohlert, who had been drinking. Security Guard Jerome Keithley had asked Wohlert to leave the premises. He did so, but returned briefly to visit the men’s room. As Wohlert was leaving the second time, he stumbled on the stairs, knocked Martha down, scrambled to his feet, and ran out to the parking lot. Martha was injured and hospitalized.
2. The Instructions.
Appellants requested the district judge to give as an instruction to the jury, Section 344 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts.1 The district judge refused to give the requested instruction, but he did give Appellants’ Instruction No. 22.2 Without passing on the propriety of the rejected instruction, we believe that in this case the judge acted properly, because Instruction [252]*252No. 22 covered the issue involved, i.e., the affirmative duty of an owner to protect a patron against the acts of third parties. One instruction on a particular issue, if adequate, is sufficient. In Duran v. Mueller, 79 Nev. 453, 460, 386 P.2d 733, 737 (1963), this court said:
“. . . If one instruction adequately covers a given theory of liability or defense, it is preferable that the court refuse additional instructions relating to the same theory, though couched in different language. . . .”
3. The Deposition.
Appellants read to the jury part of the deposition of the former Chief Security Officer, Curt Carter. The district judge excluded certain parts of the deposition on the ground it was hearsay and not admissible.3 These rejected portions of Carter’s deposition were hearsay, but appellants contend such portions were admissible in evidence under exceptions to the [253]*253exclusionary rule. We question this. In making the statements quoted by Carter, Keithley was not speaking for his employer, he was relating his recollection of events to his employer’s agent. In any event, if the trial court’s action was error, it was harmless, for we do not view the excluded testimony as favorable to appellants. Apparently it was offered to show that respondent had notice of Wohlert’s condition. If so, Keithley stated, according to Carter’s statement in the deposition: “[H]e [Wohlert] did not appear to be influenced or impaired as far as his ability in a physical capacity.” Appellants’ rights could not have been substantially affected by the district judge’s ruling, and we reject this assignment of error. NRCP 61.4
4. The Refusal to Continue the Trial.
At about three o’clock in the afternoon on the second day of the trial, appellants asked the district judge for a recess until the following day, so that Doctor Teipner, a medical witness, could appear. The appellants advised the judge that Doctor Teipner was at that time in surgery. The district judge refused appellants’ request, and the case was concluded. Appellants made no offer of proof as to the doctor’s testimony, nor did they offer his medical records. We are told that the district judge had warned counsel in the morning of the second day that he would not entertain delaying recesses and that counsel should have all witnesses available to testify, so that the trial could move along without delay.
[254]*254While we appreciate that the management of a trial is best left to the fair and sound discretion of the presiding judge, and that deliberate delaying tactics may not be tolerated, we would observe that if in fact a medical witness is called into unexpected surgery, certainly an appropriate recess normally would be in order so that he may testify before the jury. In this case, however, the jury absolved Barney’s Club of any negligence and therefore never reached the issue of damages. The order of the court refusing to grant the requested recess was harmless.
The verdict of the jury is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
484 P.2d 1079, 87 Nev. 249, 1971 Nev. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yturralde-v-barneys-club-inc-nev-1971.