148 Conn. 726 | Conn. | 1961
The defendant has appealed from a judgment rendered upon a verdict for the plaintiff in a personal injury case. It has assigned error in the denial of its motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and to set aside the verdict, in the finding of a material fact without evidence, in the court’s failure to charge as requested, and in its charge in three respects. The plaintiff assigns error
The plaintiff fell and was injured when an empty-shopping cart which she was returning to the defendant’s supermarket struck a bench which was sitting in front of the store on an elevated walk adjacent to the parking area. There was insufficient room on the walk to wheel the cart past the bench. The plaintiff had first seen the bench when she emerged from the store with her purchases in the cart. With the aid of another person, she lowered the cart from the walk to the parking surface; then she wheeled the cart to her car, placed the merchandise in the car, lifted the empty cart onto the walk, and pushed it as far as the bench, where the accident occurred as she attempted to turn the cart down onto the parking lot. The bench extended two feet from the store front onto the walk, which was three feet wide.
At the conclusion of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, the defendant rested its case and moved for a directed verdict. It presented no witnesses but laid into evidence one photograph which the plaintiff had identified. Before the jury could find the defendant negligent, there had to be evidence sufficient to establish that the defendant had notice of the condition which caused the plaintiff’s fall. New Britain Trust Co. v. New York, N.H. & H.R. Co., 145 Conn. 390, 393, 143 A.2d 438. There was no evidence that the bench had been placed on the walk by any agent or employee of the defendant. Evidence that the defendant knew that the bench was there, or that it had been there a sufficient length of time for the defendant to be charged with constructive knowledge of it, was also lacking. The
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendant in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict.