Zadornesky v. Peck

11 Conn. Super. Ct. 75
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1942
DocketFile No. 7975
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 75 (Zadornesky v. Peck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zadornesky v. Peck, 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 75 (Colo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

On June 24, 1939, and for some years prior thereto, the defendant, a middle-aged unmarried woman, was the owner of a tract of land in the rural district of the Town of Cheshire upon which was located a residence and a barn. The size and appearance of the barn is well depicted in photographs offered as exhibits by the defendant.

The premises had been used many years before as a farm by the defendant's father, when he was alive, but the defendant herself, who is employed in New Haven, used the house only as a summer residence. She made no use of the barn and had not entered it or inspected its interior for a period of at least 25 years. She did not farm the tract of land, but near the residence maintained a flower garden for her own enjoyment.

Some years prior to June 24, 1939, the owners of a neighboring farm, John Johnowitz and Henry Siwinsky, asked the defendant's permission to cut, for their own use, the hay which grew upon the land adjacent to the residence and in the front and the rear of the barn. The defendant, at that time, granted them such permission. They gave her no consideration for the privilege of cutting the hay nor did she ask them for any. She herself had no use for the hay and the only possible advantage which might accrue to her from the cutting of the hay was that it might improve the landscape surrounding the house. She regarded the granting of the privilege as a neighborly act upon her part, as both Johnowitz and Siwinsky operated a farm and needed the hay for their own stock.

At about the time the defendant gave this privilege to Johnowitz and Siwinsky they informed her that they did not have sufficient barn space on their own farm to store the hay, that they intended to build a barn of their own, and requested that in the meantime the defendant permit them to store the hay in her barn. Since she was making no use of the barn and as an act of neighborly kindness the defendant agreed that they might store the hay which they cut upon her premises in her barn. *Page 77

Annually thereafter the defendant extended the same privileges to Johnowitz and Siwinsky, who, with the help of their children and other employees, cut the hay on the defendant's premises and stored it in the haymows of the defendant's barn.

It cannot be found to be a fact that the storage of the hay by Johnowitz and Siwinsky in the defendant's barn was in consideration of, or the consideration for, their undertaking to cut the hay on the defendant's premises. The storage of the hay in the defendant's barn was entirely for their own benefit and no benefit whatever, either directly or indirectly, accrued thereby to the defendant. The defendant might have sold the hay to others but preferred to permit Johnowitz and Siwinsky to continue to cut the hay.

On June 24, 1939, the plaintiff, an elderly man over 60 years of age, was in the employ of Johnowitz and Siwinsky as a farm laborer, and had been working on their farm. On the day in question, he was brought to the defendant's premises and was raking and gathering hay in the fields, loading it upon a truck which was being operated by one of Johnowitz's sons. Two or three other employees of Johnowitz and Siwinsky were also on the premises engaged in a similar task. After the truck had been loaded, Johnowitz directed the plaintiff to follow him into another field, but the plaintiff followed the truck which was being driven into the barn, with the intention of helping to unload it. The entrance to the haymows of the barn is by way of a large door. The truck drove onto the floor of the barn in the space between the haymows, and the employees who had been riding in the truck began to pitch the load from the truck into the haymow located to the left of one entering the barn. Each mow is set off by a wooden partition about three feet in height and extending from the edge of the door to the opposite wall. The inner side of the partition slopes at an angle of 45 degrees to the floor of the mow. Immediately adjacent to the inner side of the partition, to the left of one entering the barn and in the corner formed between the outer wall of the barn and the inner wall of the partition, there was either a large hole in the flooring, approximately 12 inches wide and five feet long, caused by the collapse of the floor planking at that point or, at the time the accident occurred, of which the plaintiff complains, the flooring at that point was rotted and decayed because of its age or the action of rain and snow falling upon it *Page 78 through cracks and openings in the outer wall of the barn.

At the time the plaintiff entered the barn a covering of hay had already been spread over the floor of the mow covering that portion of the floor previously described. The plaintiff entered the barn from the left of one looking toward the entrance from the outside, saw the hay being tossed into the mow, and desiring to help in spreading it, placed one foot over the inner side of the partition and then drew his other foot over the other intending to step down upon the floor of the mow. As soon as his feet reached floor level, he fell directly into a cow stall below, a distance of about six feet, suffering a compressed fracture of the twelfth dorsal vertebrae. He was moved to the hospital, placed in a cast in which he remained for several months and at the present time is suffering from a permanent disability arising from a back injury.

The factual situation has been recited at great length because of its importance in determining both the status which the plaintiff occupied with respect to the defendant and the duty which the defendant owed to him under the circumstances. The fundamental question to be determined is whether the plaintiff was on the premises as an invitee or licensee. "The distinction is important because a landowner owes the duty to an invitee to use reasonable care to keep his premises reasonably safe for his use. Werebeychick v. Morris Land DevelopmentCo., Inc., 108 Conn. 226, 229, 142 A. 739. A licensee, on the other hand, must take the premises as he finds them. Rooney v. Woolworth, 74 Conn. 720, 723,52 A. 411; Bunnell v. Waterbury Hospital, 103 Conn. 520, 524,131 A. 501." Girard vs. Kabatznick, 128 Conn. 520, 524.

It is true that both a licensee and an invitee come upon the premises of a possessor of land with his permission and consent. To that extent the possessor of land knows of their presence on the premises. But the duty which a possessor of land owes to each is not solely dependent upon such knowledge. The duty toward each arises from the interest and advantage which the possessor derives from the presence on his premises of either a licensee or an invitee.

Broadly speaking both the so-called licensee and invitee are licensees. "A licensee is a person who is privileged to enter or remain upon land by virtue of the possessor's consent, whether given by invitation or permission." Restatement, Torts *Page 79 § 330. A licensee thus defined may be classified either as a gratuitous licensee or as a business visitor and the duty which a possessor of land owes to one who comes upon the premises with his consent is dependent upon the classification in which such person is thus to be placed.

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Related

Rooney v. Woolworth
52 A. 411 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1902)
Ward v. Avery
155 A. 502 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1931)
Werebeychick v. Morris Land Development Co., Inc.
142 A. 739 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Bunnell v. Waterbury Hospital
131 A. 501 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
Girard v. Kabatznick
24 A.2d 257 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)
Ziulkowski v. Kolodziej
175 A. 780 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1934)
Webel v. Yale University
7 A.2d 215 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1939)
Katsonas v. W. M. Sutherland Building & Contracting Co.
132 A. 553 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1926)
Pomponio v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad
32 L.R.A. 530 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Conn. Super. Ct. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zadornesky-v-peck-connsuperct-1942.