274 Pa. 394 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
The defendants, Strawbridge & Clothier, have a large department store on Market Street, Philadelphia, wherein the plaintiff, Mrs. Chapman, a customer, was hurt by a fall on March 9, 1921. This suit was for the injuries thereby sustained, on the allegation that they resulted from defendants’ negligence, as hereinafter stated. The jury found for the plaintiffs, and, from' judgments entered thereon, defendants brought these appeals.
The request of defendants for binding instructions should have been granted. A storekeeper, while required to use ordinary care to keep his place of business in a reasonably safe condition so as not to expose his customers to unnecessary dangers (29 Cyc. 453; Woodruff v. Painter & Eldridge, 150 Pa. 91; Robb v. Niles-Bement-Pond Co., 269 Pa. 298), is not liable for accidents they may therein sustain, except upon proof of his default: Huey v. Gahlenbeck, 121 Pa. 238. Plaintiff attempts to supply such proof by showing a defect in a marble step as the cause of her fall. There is a ladies’ rest room in the store and leading from there up to the retiring room is a flight of five marble steps, each with a fourteen-inch tread and a seven-inch rise. Plaintiff fell as she was descending these steps, she avers as the result of her foot sliding into a depression, three or four inches in diameter, worn in the third step. The steps, however, are still in place and, according to the evidence of disinterested witnesses who had examined and measured them, disclosed no such defect and no depression exceeding one-sixteenth of an inch in depth. Plaintiffs’ son, who made measurements there soon after the accident, testified that it took the thickness of fifteen pennies (practically seven-eighths of an inch) to bring the front of the step up to the level of the back or what he calls the heel of the step, and that from this line to the bottom of the
There was a hand rail around the opening at the top but none down the side of the steps; as they were less than three feet high, no inference can be drawn that the absence thereof created an unsafe condition, while the only testimony on the question was to the contrary. On the whole record the evidence is not sufficient to support the charge of negligence against the defendants. Of course, storekeepers are liable where they carelessly expose their
The judgments are reversed and are here entered for the defendants non obstante veredicto.