Judges: Spalding
Filed Date: 6/26/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
These are two actions of tort in which three plaintiffs are seeking to recover for injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant’s employee. In one of the actions Max Roth is the plaintiff; in the other, the plaintiffs are Ida Roth and Fannie Gallop. The cases were referred to an auditor under the usual rule. The auditor found in favor of each plaintiff. Thereafter the cases were tried to a jury on the basis of the auditor’s report and additional testimony. At the close of the evidence the judge directed verdicts for the defendant. To this action and to the denial of their motions for a new trial, the plaintiffs excepted.
The auditor filed two reports. In the case in which Max Roth was plaintiff he made the more complete findings. In the case in which Ida Roth and Fannie Gallop were plaintiffs he in effect incorporated by reference his findings in the Max Roth case on the issue of liability. We summarize these findings as follows: On September 1,1958, the plaintiffs were guests of Mr. Leon Steinberg at a wedding reception and dinner given at Temple Mishkan Tefila, in Newton, on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter. “The defendant was hired to do the catering and he assumed the obligation for furnishing the dinner, serving the food and getting the premises in order for the serving of hors d’oeuvres.” These duties included “the setting of the
At this point in his report the auditor, instead of finding the subsidiary facts on the principal issue in the case (negligence), proceeded to recite evidence, a practice which we have disapproved many times. Spirito v. Capar, 337 Mass. 431, 432, and cases cited. Sullivan v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. 341 Mass. 216, 218. Larson v. Brockton Agricultural Soc., ante, 463. These recitals are set forth in the margin.
On the evidence included in the report the ultimate finding was not warranted. Certainly on the version of the accident given by the defendant’s employee (paragraph 8 of the report), a finding of negligence would not be warranted.
If it be assumed that the testimony of Mr. Steinberg or the
The plaintiffs’ exceptions to the denial of their motions for a new trial require no discussion; there was no error.
Exceptions overruled.
‘ ‘ 6. Mr. Steinberg testified that immediately after the reception in the Reception Room, he came to see the arrangements in the Dining Room; that he noticed some sticky substance near the chair which the plaintiff was to occupy; that he spoke to the head waiter and to the waitress assigned there about it and told them to take care of it. It also is in evidence, however, that Mr. Steinberg wrote a claim letter on behalf of the plaintiff and that he afterwards turned the case over to another attorney.
“7. The plaintiff testified that after the reception he proceeded with his relatives, all from Philadelphia, to the main dining room and eventually went to the table assigned to them which was the first table on the left facing the head table. The table or tables containing the hors d’oeuvres, had been removed by the defendant’s employees and the room swept. As he was about to take his seat facing the head table with his mother and his cousin, plaintiff in the companion ease, who had preceded him, he noticed his chair wet, with some sticky substance like fruit juice; that he cleaned his chair with his napkin and sat down. There was to the left and behind him a serving table for the use of the waitress. Sometime about 8: 30 p.m. or later, the fruit cups were cleared. While he was talking with some of the guests at his table, he suddenly felt a burning sensation to his right ankle and then also to his left. He jumped up and screamed. He felt the bottom of his trousers wet and looked behind him and saw the waitress on the floor back of his mother with a pitcher in her hand, with its contents spilled all over.
“8. The waitress testified that as she was carrying a pitcher containing very hot soup and was about to approach a serving table, to the left of the guest table she was serving, . . . she slipped on a wet cigar and fell on her back and spilled the hot soup on the plaintiff. She denied Mr. Steinberg talked to her about the sticky substance on the floor near that table at 6:30 p.m.’’