Staples v. Senders
| Decision Date | 16 April 1940 |
| Citation | Staples v. Senders, 164 Or. 244, 101 P.2d 232 (Or. 1940) |
| Parties | STAPLES v. SENDERS et al. |
| Court | Oregon Supreme Court |
In Banc.
Appeal from Circuit Court, Multnomah County; John P. Winter, Judge.
On rehearing.
Former opinion modified.
For former opinion, see 96 P.2d 215.
James Arthur Powers, of Portland (Otto J. Kraemer of Portland, on the brief), for appellants.
Calvin N. Souther and Robert T. Mautz, both of Portland (Wilbur, Beckett, Howell p>Page & Oppenheimer, of Portland, on the brief), for respondent.
The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court for personal injuries sustained when he fell through an open trapdoor on premises owned by the defendant and in the possession and control of a tenant of the defendant. Without passing on other questions presented in the record, we held in a former opinion, that,if there was any negligence of the defendant shown, such negligence as a matter of law was not the proximate cause of the accident. 96 P.2d 215. We granted a rehearing because of certain evidence brought to our attention by counsel for the plaintiff, which, if susceptible to counsel's construction, casts doubt upon the correctness of our conclusion.
The accident is described in some detail in our former opinion. It may here be briefly summarized as follows. The plaintiff was on the premises, occupied as an antique and second-hand shop by the defendant's lessee, as a prospective customer. The trapdoor, when closed, constituted a part of the floor of the shop and covered a flight of stairs to the basement, to which the plaintiff, with his wife and the proprietress of the shop, had descended but a few minutes before the accident. On their return to the ground floor the trapdoor was left open. The plaintiff then proceeded to examine some clocks which were hanging on one of the walls of the shop. As he did so he was facing the wall and moving sidewise in the direction of the opening. His gaze and attention being fixed on the clocks, he came to the opening without seeing it and plunged through to the floor of the basement below.
The only ground of negligence set forth in the complaint was the failure of the defendant to maintain railings around the opening and a railing along the upper portion of the basement stairs. On one side of these stairs was a railing which stopped at the level of the floor. Under plaintiff's contention this railing should have been extended through the trapdoor and above the floor. It was our view that, even though such railings had been provided, they would not have prevented the accident because the plaintiff's testimony, a portion of which is quoted in the opinion, showed that, owing to the manner in which he fell and threw out his hands, no such railing, had it been there, would have come within his grasp. Our re-examination of the testimony, and particularly that portion of it on which counsel for the plaintiff rely in their petition for rehearing, convinces us that that construction of the evidence was too restricted. While the record is not clear and plaintiff's statements are somewhat confusing, we think the jury could have found from his evidence, taken as a whole, that, as he fell, he reached with his left hand for the place where it is claimed the railing along the stairway should have been. If this were so, he might have grasped it and broken his fall; and, although the matter is more or less speculative, yet, under those circumstances, if negligence of the defendant in the particular alleged was shown, the question of proximate cause would then become a question for the jury. Lyons v. Lich, 145 Or. 606, 613, 28 P.2d 872; American National Bank v. Wolfe, 22 Tenn.App 642, 125 S.W.2d 193; Dexter v. Fisher, 256 A.D. 738 11 N.Y.S.2d 776; Renfro Drug Co. v. Jackson, Tex.Civ.App., 81 S.W.2d 101.
It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine whether the owner of the premises was guilty of a breach of duty to the plaintiff in failing to surround the trapdoor with handrails and in failing to extend above the floor level the handrail which ran alongside the stairs.
The plaintiff has pleaded, and relies upon, the Building Code Ordinance No. 33911 of the City of Portland, passed in 1918, the pertinent sections of which read as follows:
The building was erected before the ordinance was passed, but afterwards, in 1935, a fire occurred which damaged the trapdoor and the stairway beneath it, and the defendant made the necessary repairs at a cost of approximately five per cent of the value of the building. It is the contention of the plaintiff that in making these repairs the defendant failed to comply with the requirement of Section 69 (b), that "the work done shall, as far as is practical, improve the conditions or conform to the code". The Circuit Court submitted the question to the jury, instructing them that, if they found that the trapdoor constituted a wellhole when open, and that it would have been practical for the defendant in replacing the trapdoor "to have improved the conditions or conformed to the code by constructing a substantial railing for said wellhole", and that she failed to do so, she was negligent; and, further, that, if the jury found that "it was practical for the defendant to have improved the conditions or conformed to the code by constructing a handrail long the outside of the upper portion of said stairs", and that she failed to do so, she was negligent.
It was the duty of the court to construe the ordinance, and it was error so to charge the jury as to permit them to determine whether or not its provisions governed the rights of the parties. The question, for example, whether the opening in the floor was a wellhole within the meaning of the ordinance was a question of law and not of fact. Were it to be held otherwise, then in another case presenting identical facts another jury could find that such an opening was not a wellhole and that the ordinance was inapplicable, and there would be no rule for the guidance either of property owners of the officers of the city.
The defendant having, at the trial, by appropriate motions, raised the question, it becomes our duty to construe the ordinance and determine whether it applies to the facts presented by the record in this case. In so doing, we are required to avoid imputing to the lawmaking body an intention that would lead to absurdity and to give to the provisions a reasonable construction. "A thing within the intention is regarded as within the statute, though not within the letter; and a thing within the letter is not within the statute unless within the intention." People v. Chicago, 152 Ill. 546, 551, 38 N.E. 744, 745.
The use of trapdoors in buildings and sidewalks is a matter of common knowledge ( Whisler v. United States National Bank, 160 Or. 10, 82 P.2d 1079, and Lewis v. Jake's Famous Crawfish, Inc., 148 Or. 340, 36 P.2d 352), and is recognized by the Building Code of the City of Portland, Section 794. Ordinarily trapdoors in buildings cover a flight of stairs, and about the only purpose they serve is to form a part of the floor when not open and thus permit the free use of that portion of the floor space. See Torpey v. Sanders, 248 A.D. 303, 289 N.Y.S. 532. If they must be surrounded by railings this utility is lost, and the trapdoors themselves might as well be abolished. We are not now questioning the power of the city council to enact a regulation abolishing them, but only calling attention to the consequences of attaching to the ordinance the meaning insisted upon by the plaintiff.
The...
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