Court Opinion

ID: 1080138
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:38:07.463234+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:06:47.129933
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

                                 EASTERN SECTION                  FILED
                                                                  December 9, 1997

JOHN R. WHALEN,                                               Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                            ) C/A NO. 03A01-9707-CV-00246
                                                              Appellate C ourt Clerk
                                            )
       Plaintiff-Appellant,                 ) MORGAN CIRCUIT
                                            )
v.                                          ) HON. RUSSELL SIMM ONS,
                                            ) JUDGE
REUBEN ROBERTS and wife,                    )
JO E. ROBERTS,                              ) AFFIRMED
                                            ) AND
       Defendants-Appellees.                ) REMANDED

JAM ES FRANK WILSON, WILSON & BROOKS, Wartburg, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

GEORGE H. BUXTON, III, BUXTON LAW OFFICE, Oak Ridge, for Defendants-
Appellees.

                                        OPINION

                                                          Franks, J.

              In this action for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff

on defendants’ premises, the Trial Judge granted defendants’ motion to dismiss

pursuant to T.R.C.P. 12.02(6), and plaintiff has appealed.

              In the complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendants had damaged the door

of their garage by striking it with their vehicle, and called plaintiff, who was a relative,

to repair the door. Plaintiff came to defendants’ premises “and was attempting to

repair the door, when part of the garage door broke loose, striking plaintiff across the

face”, causing serious bodily injury.
              In sustaining the motion to dismiss, the Trial Judge said as a matter of

law that defendants had discharged any duties they owed to plaintiff as owners of the

premises, “regardless of whether he was either compensated or served gratuitously,

while on the premises to undertake repairs”.

              It has long been held that the owners or occupiers of premises owe a

duty to invitees to maintain their premises in a reasonably safe condition, and to warn

the invitee of any dangerous condition on the premises. But there is an exception to

the rule where the invitee is a repairman who has been called to the premises to make

repair. Shell Oil Co. V. Banks, 330 S.W.2d 569 (Tenn. App. 1959). The Supreme

Court in Blair v. Campbell, 924 S.W.2d 75 (Tenn. 1996), reaffirmed the rule in Banks,

and quoted with approval:

              An exception to the general rule is recognized where the risks arise
              from, or are intimately connected with, defects of the premises or of
              machinery or appliances located thereon which the contractor has
              undertaken to repair. As to contracts for such repair work, it is reasoned
              that the contract is sufficient in itself to impart notice of a defect, the
              extent of which the repairman must discover for himself. This is merely
              to say that one assumes the risk of a known danger or of an undertaking
              which is inherently dangerous. Blair, p. 77.

The Trial Court relied on Blair, in dismissing the case.

              Plaintiff further argues that he should have been allowed to amend his

complaint after the Trial Judge entered the judgment dismissing this case. As we

understand plaintiff’s purported amendment, he sought to aver that he had no

particular expertise as a repairman, and was not generally engaged in the repair

business. We do not reach the issue of whether plaintiff should have been allowed to

amend, because the plaintiff would have been entitled to prove the facts he seeks to

show by the amendment under the wording of the original complaint. The exception

in Blair, does not depend upon the expertise of the repairman or lack thereof. Rather,

as Blair notes, the contract itself is sufficient to impart notice of the defective

condition to the invitee.

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              For the foregoing reasons we affirm the judgment of the Trial Court and

remand at appellant’s cost.

                                         __________________________
                                         Herschel P. Franks, J.

CONCUR:

___________________________
Houston M. Goddard, P.J.

___________________________
Hon. William H. Inman, J.

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