Under the view we take of the pleadings, the plaintiff’s deposition and the affidavit of the defendant’s employee, the issues presented to the trial court by the defendant’s motion for summary judgment were (1) whether the facts showed no negligence on the part of the defendant, or (2) even if the defendant was negligent, whether the plaintiff nevertheless failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety.
Both of these questions are ordinarily matters for determination by a jury. “Questions of negligence, diligence, contributory negligence, and proximate cause are peculiarly matters for a jury, and a court should not take the place of a jury in solving them, except in plain and indisputable cases.”
Peck v. Baker,
*695
The only matter that remains for consideration, therefore, is whether there was plainly and indisputably no negligence by the defendant or whether plaintiff plainly and indisputably failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety.
This court is not prepared to hold that the owner of a bar owes any greater duty to his customers than any other business establishment owes to its invitees or that patrons of bars can expect a higher degree of care by virtue of that fact. But the owner of any business establishment owes a duty to exercise ordinary care in keeping the approaches and passages which he expects and invites his customers to traverse free of objects and conditions of which he has knowledge and which might foreseeably cause injury.
Kitchens v.
Davis,
Nor can we say that the plaintiff obviously failed to exercise
*696
ordinary care for her own safety. Defendant takes the position that this ease is controlled by the principle that one who recklessly tests an observed and clearly obvious peril is guilty of a lack of ordinary care as was held in
Carroll Electric &c. Corp. v. Simpson,
Judgment reversed.
