Lead Opinion
T. Z. Chastain and his wife appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants on his slip and fall claim
In order to prevail on summary judgment, “the moving party must demonstrate that there are no genuine issues of any material fact and that the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, support judgment as a matter of law.” Hutchins v. J. H. Harvey Co.,
The undisputed facts in this case show that on the morning of the accident, Chastain and his wife went to North DeKalb Mall to walk. While walking through the common area of the mall, Chastain slipped and fell on what Mrs. Chastain described as a two and a half foot line of dribbled water. A passerby described the spill as “water sprinkled around on the marble floor in an area of approximately two feet.”
North DeKalb and ICS submitted evidence of a continuous inspection policy, under which there was always at least one employee patrolling the mall looking for hazards, passing any one spot every 15-30 minutes. But, there was no evidence in the record from an employee who could state specifically that he or she had actually walked the mall during the period of time in question.
The trial court granted summary judgment to the mall, holding that there was no evidence that a reasonable inspection could have discovered the hazard. This appeal followed.
In order to show defendants were negligent, Chastain must present evidence that (1) the mall and ICS had actual or constructive knowledge of the water on the floor, and (2) he was without knowledge of the substance or was hindered from discovering it by the defendants. Robinson v. Kroger Co.,
A plaintiff may show constructive knowledge by two methods: (1) proof that an employee of North DeKalb or ICS was in the immediate area of the water and could have easily seen and removed it prior to the slip and fall; or (2) proof that the water had been in the mall for a sufficient length of time that defendants should have discovered and removed it during a reasonable inspection. Alterman Foods v. Ligon,
If there is no evidence that the water could have been discovered during a reasonable inspection, then no inference arises that defendants’ failure to discover the defect was the result of any alleged failure to inspect. Hopkins v. Kmart Corp.,
Q[uestion to Mr. Chastain]: Would the water on the floor have been easily visible to you if you had been looking down?
A: No.
Q: Would the water on the floor have been easily visible to others?
A: I don’t know. If they had been looking for it, they might have seen it. But it was clear water. And the floor is shiny and it wasn’t a puddle. It was just like somebody scattered some water around for two or three feet.
Q: Would it be fair to say that the scatters of water were not easily visible to you or anyone else?
A: I’d say so.
Q[uestion to Mrs. Chastain]: It was not a puddle?
A: It was not a puddle, no, it was not a puddle.
Q: Was there any color to the water?
A: No. It was clear. . . . The only way you could really see it was to kind of get like this and look down (indicating). And then you could see it because of the shiny floor.
*804 Q: So you were there. As you were standing up, you couldn’t see the water?
A: Unh-unh. You had to get down. When I got down and looked to see what had happened to him, I saw the water. And I saw his pants leg was wet.
Q; How far did you have to get down? Did you have to go all the way to the floor or on your knees or what?
A: No, no, you didn’t have to get down on your knees, but you had to go kind of sideways to look down.
Accordingly, “summary judgment was proper because the alleged [hazard] was, by the [Chastains’] own admission, so difficult to detect. Constructive knowledge can only be inferred with proof that the proprietor or its agent could have easily discovered and corrected the alleged hazard.” Lindsey v. Ga. Bldg. Auth.,
Evidence that the water was not easily visible is especially important here, given that there was no puddle, only a small area of dribbled water, together with the sheer size of the area encompassed by the mall and the number of customers walking through the mall. See Alterman Foods, supra at 623; Hutchins, supra at 585. Accordingly, as the trial court correctly held, North DeKalb and ICS have successfully demonstrated that the Chastains are unable to show that the water could have been discovered during a reasonable inspection. Therefore, the Chastains have not shown that North DeKalb or ICS had either actual or constructive knowledge of the hazard. The trial court correctly granted summary judgment to North DeKalb Mall and ICS.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Chastain’s wife also sued for loss of consortium.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
To establish constructive knowledge, an invitee must present evidence that either: (1) an employee of the owner or occupier “was in the immediate area of the dangerous condition and could have easily seen the substance and removed the hazard,” or (2) the owner/occupier failed to exercise reasonable care in inspecting and keeping the premises in safe condition.
The majority concludes that summary judgment was proper because “by the Chastains’ own admission, [the water was] so difficult to detect.”
But the issue of whether the owner/occupier could have “easily discovered” and removed the water is not dispositive in this case, where the Chastains do not allege nor does the evidence show that an employee was in the immediate vicinity of the water on the floor. The Chastains did not seek to establish constructive knowledge by alleging that an employee of the owner or occupier was in the immediate area of the dangerous condition and could have “easily discovered” and removed the water. Instead, they sought to establish constructive knowledge by showing that the owner/occupier or agent thereof failed to exercise reasonable care in inspecting the premises and by showing that the defendants failed to follow a reasonable inspection procedure at the time of the incident.
Considering what the Chastains saw and determining that the water was not easily discoverable, the majority reaches the conclusion that there was no evidence that a reasonable inspection would have revealed and removed the water. But the evidence presented by the Chastains regarding the amount of water on the floor was sufficient to call into question whether a reasonable inspection would have discovered it. There was sufficient water on the floor to cause Chastain’s fall, dampen his pants leg, and still span an area of two to three feet.
The Chastains presented evidence, which when viewed in a light to favor them, raised an inference that the water was discoverable pursuant to a reasonable inspection. And although there was evi
I am authorized to state that Chief Judge Blackburn and Judge Miller join in this dissent.
(Punctuation omitted.) Alterman Foods v. Ligon,
Kauffman v. Eastern Food & Gas,
See Blake v. Kroger Co.,
Brooks, supra.
(Punctuation omitted.)
Lindsey, supra at 720; Rodriquez, supra at 384.
See Alterman Foods, supra at 622-623; Rodriquez, supra.
Lindsey, supra at 720.
See text accompanying footnotes 2 and 3 of the dissent, supra.
Compare Hardee’s Food, supra at 867 (2) (b) (grease on floor was invisible and would not have been discovered through a reasonable visual inspection or cleaned through reasonable procedure); Blake, supra at 144 (the evidence failed to show that a grocery store’s supposed failure to inspect and clean caused its failure to discover an alleged wet spot, where the spot was barely visible, if at all, to those who crawled on the floor looking for it and it could not have been speculated that sweeping would have removed the hazard).
