Lifritz v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
Decision Date | 28 September 1971 |
Docket Number | No. 33931,33931 |
Citation | 472 S.W.2d 28 |
Parties | Harold LIFRITZ, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND COMPANY, Defendant-Respondent. |
Court | Missouri Court of Appeals |
Padberg, Raack, McSweeney & Slater, William J. Raack, St. Louis, for plaintiff-appellant.
Moser, Marsalek, Carpenter, Cleary, Jaeckel, Keaney & Brown, F. X. Cleary, Daniel T. Rabbitt, St. Louis, for defendant-respondent.
WEIER, Commissioner.
Plaintiff, the purchaser of an aluminum stepladder from defendant company, fell from the ladder and sustained personal injuries. The trial court sustained defendant's motion for a new trial after a verdict and judgment awarded plaintiff the sum of $7,900.00. We reverse and remand, with instructions to reinstate the verdict and judgment.
Harold Lifritz, the plaintiff, was 45 years of age and for 22 years had been an engineer for the Norfolk & Western Railroad. Weighing 173 pounds, he stood five feet ten and one-half inches.
On August 9, 1967, Mr. Lifritz purchased a six-foot aluminum stepladder from the defendant. Subsequently, he used it to paint the interior of his house and to take down and put up storm windows. It was used only at his house in Affton, Missouri, and no one other than himself had used the ladder. Between the time he purchased it on August 9, 1967, and the date of his fall, April 7, 1969, the ladder had not been damaged in any respect. On April 7, 1969, he placed the stepladder in a fully open position upon the level concrete floor of his garage, with the intention of lifting a piece of lumber to a loft storage space in that building. There was no grease or foreign substance on the floor. The piece of lumber was 2 inches by 4 inches, approximately 8 feet long, and weighed 8 to 9 pounds. Mr. Lifritz leaned it against the ladder and then ascended to the third rung. He stood flat-footed on the rung, with his feet spaced 6 to 8 inches apart. With his right hand he reached for the piece of lumber. He had it above his head, shoving it into the loft, when he felt the left leg give and the ladder then collapsed underneath him. This threw him to his left and he struck his head and neck on a window fan sitting on the floor of the garage.
The ladder, introduced into evidence as an exhibit, was manufactured from a thinwall extruded aluminum alloy. The channeled sidepieces were joined to the steps with rivets. Below the first step four braces ran from the front and back of each sidepiece up to the under part of the first step. These were riveted to each member. No such bracing was used on the second and third steps. The left sidepiece had bent inwardly at the second step. The right sidepiece had also bent inwardly just below the second step. The first step was bent upwardly in the middle and all four braces remained essentially straight.
After the trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, defendant filed an after-trial motion, first seeking to have the judgment set aside and to render a new judgment in its favor in accordance with its motion for directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The court denied the motion for judgment in accordance with defendant's motion for directed verdict, but sustained the motion for new trial. Plaintiff has appealed, contending that the manner in which the court set forth its grounds or reasons for sustaining the motion for new trial indicated that it determined that there was insufficient or no evidence upon which the jury could determine liability against defendant. Thus, plaintiff maintains the trial court, if it granted any relief to defendant on the basis of the motion, should have granted defendant's motion for judgment in accordance with its motion for directed verdict, and failure to do so was error. Plaintiff asserts the evidence presented a clear case of liability against the defendant, and so, conversely, the trial court erred in granting defendant any relief and the jury verdict therefore must be reinstated. More simply put, plaintiff contends the court erred in granting defendant a new trial for reasons not proper to support such action and further that the reasons so relied upon by the court did not exist. Defendant counters by leveling on plaintiff that fearsome and destructive charge that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case and, further, even if he did, what the court actually intended as grounds for sustaining the motion for new trial was that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence--an unassailable discretionary ground, where, as here maintained, there is no showing of abuse.
First, we consider submissible case. Plaintiff submitted a theory of strict tort liability. Since the adoption of the rule stated in 2 Restatement, Law of Torts, Second, § 402A, in Keener v. Dayton Electric Manufacturing Company, Mo., 445 S.W.2d 362, there can be no doubt that he who sells a product in a defective condition which is reasonably dangerous to the user or consumer is liable for personal injury thereby caused to the user or consumer. The failure of proof here asserted by defendant is that plaintiff did not prove the ladder was defective or dangerous when put to a use reasonably anticipated at the time it was sold by defendant to plaintiff. In support of this statement, defendant first insists that the occurrence itself did not prove a defect existed or that the ladder was dangerous. In cross-examining plaintiff, defendant's counsel brought out the fact that instructions or a warning were printed on the side of the ladder, which contained this paragraph:
Arguing a posteriori--from the occurrence back to determine the cause--defendant advances the theory that since the incident described by plaintiff was exactly as warned against in this paragraph, the bending of the ladder would not prove a defect existed, but rather it may have been the result of stretching or placing the ladder in an off-balance condition. The plaintiff, however, testified that he stood 'flat-footed' on the third rung, with his feet 6 to 8 inches apart; his left hand was on the top of the ladder; he lifted the piece of lumber from where it was leaning against the ladder with his right hand, not off on one side or the other, but above his head; and shoved it into the loft. Obviously, the warning on the ladder would not raise any inference that the incident was caused by an act of plaintiff in creating an unbalanced condition. Furthermore, plaintiff's evidence refutes such an unbalanced condition and, in determining whether plaintiff made a submissible case, we consider the evidence most favorable to plaintiff with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, and disregard defendant's evidence unless it aids plaintiff's case. Pavyer Printing Machine Works v. South Side...
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