DocketNumber: Civ. No. 17926
Citation Numbers: 104 Cal. App. 2d 632, 232 P.2d 288, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1671
Judges: Hanson
Filed Date: 6/8/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is an appeal by plaintiff, a married woman, from an adverse judgment predicated on the verdict of the jury in an action to recover damages for personal injuries received when a chair, upon which plaintiff was seating herself, collapsed in an apartment owned by defendant and occupied by appellant, her husband and children. The first question we are necessarily called upon to decide is whether the facts proved by plaintiff-appellant disclosed a legal liability upon which a verdict if it had been rendered in her favor could stand. If such a verdict would have been permitted to stand then the second question is whether the court erred in instructing the jury on the theory that the status of the parties was that of landlord and tenant, instead of invitor and invitee, and in refusing to give certain instructions requested by plaintiff-appellant based on the latter theory. The jury returned a verdict as has been stated for defendant-respondent.
Appellant testified that in her two-week stay in the hotel she had paid little or no attention to the chair and that a casual inspection of the leg of the chair would not have disclosed its condition. There was no evidence to indicate that the split in the chair was not of recent origin; no evidence that the split was patent rather than latent; in fact, the evidence was that it was not patent and would not have been visible upon a casual inspection; no evidence that the defendant could by any reasonable inspection have discovered the defect. There was evidence that the defendant had no actual knowledge of the defect.
The court denied defendant’s motion for a nonsuit and at the close of the evidence likewise denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The court thereupon submitted the case to the jury upon instructions based upon the theory that the relationship of the parties was that of landlord and tenant, and not invitor and invitee as contended for by plaintiff-appellant. Viewing the case on the assumption contended for by appellant that the relation between appellant and the hotel was that of invitee and invitor, the burden of proof, nevertheless, was upon appellant to prove (1) either that the defendant had actual knowledge of the defect or, if not, that (2) the defendant had constructive knowledge that the chair was in a defective condition involving an unreasonable risk to the invitee. (Owen v. Beauchamp, 66 Cal.App.2d 750 [152 P.2d 756]; Matherne v. Los Feliz Theatre, 53 Cal.App.2d 660 [128
The error not being prejudicial, the judgment is affirmed.
White, P. J., and Drapeau, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 25, 1951, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 2,1951.