D'Andrea v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.

Decision Date21 February 1972
Docket NumberNos. 1260-A,s. 1260-A
Citation109 R.I. 479,287 A.2d 629
PartiesGeorge J. D'ANDREA v. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. George J. D'ANDREA, Jr., p.p.a. v. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. ppeal, 1261-Appeal.
CourtRhode Island Supreme Court
OPINION

JOSLIN, Justice.

These civil actions against Sears, Roebuck and Co. were brought in the Superior Court by George J. D'Andrea, Jr., an minor who sued by his father and next friend, George J. D'Andrea, to recover for injuries sustained as a result of the defendant's alleged negligence, and by the father who sued in his own name for consequential damages. At the close of all of the evidence, the trial justice reserved decision on the defendant's motions for directed verdicts and the cases were allowed to go to the jury which returned a verdict of $175,000 for the son and of $6,564.35 for the father. Following rendition of verdicts, the trial justice denied the defendant's motions for direction. Thereafter, the defendant's motion for a new trial in each case was denied, and the father was granted a new trial in the case brought by him on the issue of damages only, unless defendant consented to an additur of $4,914. 1 The defendant refused to consent and has appealed both cases. Except where otherwise indicated we refer only to the son's case, but what we say with respect thereto applies equally, wherever appropriate, propriate, to the father's case.

The plaintiff was 18 years of age when on August 3, 1966 he sustained the serious injuries resulting in these actions. He had graduated from high school in June, and while waiting to matriculate at college in the fall, had obtained summer employment as a laborer with Manpower, Inc., which concern was engaged in the business of assigning employees to various businesses. About two weeks prior to the accident Manpower had assigned plaintiff to work at defendant's warehouse in Cranston. His work there was performed principally on a long loading platform and included the operation of a forklift truck.

The loading platform, which was approximately four feet above ground level, ran along the front of defendant's warehouse. Access between it and the warehouse was through three bay doors. In front of the center door was a loading dock consisting of a steel plate which was approximately six feet by six feet in size. It formed a part of the floor surface of the loading platform, was hinged to it at the end nearer the warehouse doors, extended at its opposite end about six inches beyond the edge of the platform, and, when not in use, rested on adjustable stops which were designed to keep it level with the remainder of the platform floor. When in proper working condition, a spring mechanism under the plate would cause the end closer to the edge of the platform to elevate whenever a delivery truck backed into its projecting arms, and then, after the truck reached the platform and came to a stop, the end which had earlier raised itself automatically lowered to the floor of the truck thereby providing a ramp whereby hand trucks could be used to facilitate the loading and unloading of merchandise from delivery trucks.

The accident occurred at about 12:30 on the afternoon of August 3. There were no eyewitnesses to all that occurred, and plaintiff, who suffers from retrograde amnesia, or loss of memory as to the day's events, was unable to relate what happened. What little evidence there is about what took place came from William R. Gosselin, a co-worker. He and plaintiff had been unloading a delivery truck that morning during which plaintiff had operated the forklift truck. Following lunch, Gosselin was standing just inside one of the warehouse doors checking invoices when he heard the forklift truck's motor start. Next, he heard a 'clang.' He looked up and saw plaintiff driving the forklift truck parallel to, and about one foot from, the edge of the platform. He then saw the metal plate drop below the level of the platform; plaintiff fall out of the forklift to the ground; the forklift itself topple off the platform onto the ground and partially on top of plaintiff; and the plate then return to its normal position. Gosselin, with the help of others in the vicinity, raised the forklift and removed plaintiff from under it. The plaintiff was then taken to a hospital where he was treated for massive injuries including cerebral contusions, a fractured skull, and a fractured clavicle. He still suffers from residual brain damage.

Initially, defendant argues that the trial justice's refusal to direct a verdict in its behalf was error. Its position is that there was neither testimony that the loading dock was not in good repair nor evidence that the steel plate had ever dropped more than two and one-half inches below the level of the platform or that such a drop, either alone or in connection with any other events, could have caused the forklift to tip over and fall from the platform to the ground.

To allow a jury to find both negligence and causation upon so limited and sparse a showing, defendant argues, is to invite conjecture and speculation. Such findings, it says, could be reached only by pyramiding atop the initial inference that the loading dock was defective, the further inference that the forklift truck tipped and toppled from the platform because of that defect.

The flaw in defendant's position is its dependence on an incomplete recital of evidence which omits much that is essential and material in the case. Thus, for example, it overlooks the fact that defendant's employee who was in charge of the warehouse was not called as a witness and that the failure to call him was not explained. It overlooks, also, the co-worker Gosselin's testimony that the steel plate dropped one or two inches below the floor level when he, although weighing only 160 pounds, walked on that portion nearer the edge of the platform and that he had reported this to his superior; that the steel plate dropped when plaintiff drove the forklift truck over it, and then raised itself to floor-level position immediately after the forklift toppled from the loading platform; that on the day of the accident the loading dock was operated manually rather than automatically as would have been the case had it been in good operating condition; and that the adjustable stops, if properly in line, would have prevented the steel plate from dropping below floor level.

In passing upon defendant's motion for a directed verdict, the trial justice was not limited in his consideration to the facts stressed by defendant in his argument to us. Instead, he was required to look at all of the material evidence, and to view it, as well as the inferences which could reasonably and properly be drawn therefrom, in the light most favorable to plaintiff. It apparently satisfied him, as it does us, that there were controverted factual issues, which, if resolved in favor of plaintiff, would entitle him to a verdict. That being so, our settled rule required that those issues be submitted to a jury for its determination. Walsh v. DiNitto, 107 R.I. 356, 267 A.2d 714 (1970); Maggi v. De Fusco, 107 R.I. 278, 267 A.2d 424 (1970); Russo v. Odell, 105 R.I. 349, 252 A.2d 135 (1969); Dawson v. Rhode Island Auditorium Inc., 104 R.I. 116, 121-122, 242 A.2d 407, 411 (1968).

Defendant further contends that the trial justice should have granted its motion for a new trial. In assigning his refusal to do so as error, defendant does not suggest that the trial justice did not fully meet what in Barbato v. Epstein, 97 R.I. 191, 196 A.2d 836 (1964) we said were his obligations, viz., to consider all of the meterial evidence in the case in the light of the charge to the jury, to pass on its weight and the credibility of the witnesses, and then, after the completion of that evidence-sifting process, to decide whether to approve the verdict or to set it aside. Instead, it contends that in weighing that evidence he misconceived some that was material and that his decision by reason thereof should not be afforded the great weight it otherwise would be entitled to receive.

What defendant refers to as a misconception is found in the trial justice's reference to the testimony of Professor Hatch, an expert who testified for defendant. The defendant says that the trial justice erroneously attributed to the professor the statement that there was a 'worn area' in the notch which was located in the lower arm of the loading dock. That the trial justice by that reference may have misconceived material evidence-and we have serious misgivings that he did-does not ipso facto entitle defendant to a new trial. Instead, it calls for us to apply the appellate rule which says a new trial is in order only if our own independent examination of the record fails to disclose any competent evidence which, if believed, would support the jury's verdict. Landes v. Faella, 106 R.I. 23, 255 A.2d 724 (1969). We made that kind of an examination of the evidence in the case when we considered defendant's contention that it was entitled to have a verdict directed in its favor. Our conclusion then was that there was competent evidence in the record which, if believed by the jury, would justify a plaintiff's verdict. On reexamination we cannot say that the record is so devoid of competent evidence in support of the verdict as to justify our ordering a new trial.

The defendant also argues that the trial justice should have granted its request to instruct the jury on the issue of assumed risk. 2 It is, of course, axiomatic that an instruction must be applicable to the facts adduced in evidence, and that a requested instruction should be refused unless premised upon those facts. Handy v. Geary,...

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    ..."only able to work part-time," the court approved recovery for loss of future earning capacity. And in D'Andrea v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 109 R.I. 479, 488-89, 287 A.2d 629, 633 (1972), the court sustained the father's right to recover for the impairment or diminution of his minor child's ea......
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