291 Mass. 202 | Mass. | 1935
These two actions of tort were tried together. The first is an action by the surviving husband of Lizzie W. Adriance, deceased, as administrator of her estate, to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by her in the defendant's hardware store. The second is an action by the surviving husband in his own right to recover consequential damages. There was a verdict for the plaintiff in each case. The cases come before us on the defendant's exceptions, including exceptions to the denial of its motions for directed verdicts. The only questions argued
1. Verdicts for the defendant should have been directed.
The evidence warranted findings that Mrs. Adriance was in the defendant’s hardware store as a customer and that she sustained personal injuries as a result of faffing over a lawnmower, the wheels of which rested upon the floor and the handle of which leaned against a table used as a counter at one side of the store.
The evidence, however, did not warrant a finding that the defendant was negligent. It could not have been found that the defendant failed to use reasonable care to keep the premises reasonably safe for the use of Mrs. Adriance as a customer or to warn her against dangers attendant upon such use. Crone v. Jordan Marsh Co. 269 Mass. 289, 291. Kelley v. Goldberg, 288 Mass. 79, 81.
There was evidence that Mrs. Adriance, an elderly woman, walked sideways to her left along the side of the counter, which was thirty-two inches high, looking at articles displayed thereon and listening to statements of the salesman, who was about two feet from her at her right. The lawnmower was at her left. At this point the aisle between the counter and the other side of the store was four feet, eight inches wide, and just beyond the lawnmower, as Mrs. Adriance approached it, was a ‘Tally column,” which projected five and one half inches from the counter into the aisle. Testimony to the extreme width of the lawnmower varied from twenty-one and one half inches to twenty-four inches and to the distance which the wheels projected beyond the counter, from less than eleven inches to twelve and one half inches. The lawnmower had a handle with a crosspiece of the width of fourteen inches. From the floor to the top of the handle was fifty-two inches. A photograph shows — and there is no evidence to the contrary — that the handle of the lawnmower would have been in plain sight of Mrs. Adriance if she had looked toward it while she was walking beside the counter. And, as a matter of common knowledge, the handle if seen by her would have warned her of the location
2. In view of the conclusion reached it is unnecessary to discuss the admissibility of the affidavit of Mrs. Adriance offered by the plaintiffs and admitted subject to the defendant’s exception. In considering the evidence we have assumed in favor of the plaintiffs that the affidavit was admissible.
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment in each case for the defendant.