The plaintiff testified that she did not see the tear or split in the mat before she caught her heel in it because she “wasn’t looking down to see it.” And she answered in the affirmative counsel’s questions on cross examination: “Q. If you had been looking down you could have seen it, couldn’t you? A. I imagine I could have, yes, sir. Q. It was light enough to see it, wasn’t it? A. That’s right. Q. You saw it afterwards without any difficulty? A. Yes, sir.” And she answered “No” to further questions: “Q. Mrs. Chotas, there was nothing to
The defendant argues that this evidence shows that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by her own negligence. The plaintiff did not say that she was not looking where she was going; she simply said that she was not looking down at the defeet in the mat. Her testimony as a whole does not show as a matter of law that in the exercise of ordinary care in all the circumstances the plaintiff should have been looking down and should have seen and avoided the tear in the mat. The pleadings and evidence presented a jury question whether at the time the plaintiff caught her heel in the mat she should have been looking down at the defect. The same issue was presented and, upon this court’s request for instruction, the Supreme Court answered and decided: “Where the owner or occupier of premises fails to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for the use of those who go thereon by his invitation, is an invitee who is injured by a patent defect in such premises, of which she has no actual notice, to be held as a matter of law to be lacking in ordinary care in failing to observe the defect in túne to avoid the injury? In other words, will the neglect of a person to observe a patent defect in the steps which she-uses in.entering a building at the invitation of the owner, of which defect she has no actual notice or knowl
Looking continuously, without intermission, for defects in a floor is not required in all circumstances. Lane Drug Stores v. Brooks,
It cannot be said as a matter of law that the plaintiff is barred from recovery because she could reasonably have apprehended and avoided the consequences of any negligence of the defendant, so that if the jury found both parties to be negligent, the rule of
Anything appearing to the contrary in the decisions and opinions in the following cases, or in any others decided by this court, must yield to the decision of the Supreme Court in Wynne v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.,
The defendant urges that we should construe the decision in the Wynne case, supra, as this court apparently construed it in Ford v. S. A. Lynch Corp.,
The trial court erred in granting summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
