Opinion by
These appeals are from the refusal to grant the motion for judgment n.o.v. and the granting of plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial. The action in trespass was instituted by Marvin and Isolde Cohen, husband and wife, against Food Fair Stores, Inc., defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff husband in the amount of $715.90 and found for the defendant as to the wife. Plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial was based on the ground that the damages awarded by the jury were inadequate and that the verdict as rendered was inconsistent. Defendant’s motion for judgment n.o.v. was based on the ground that no negligence was shown on the part of the defendant, or if negligence was shown, plaintiff, Isolde Cohen, was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The evidence viewed most favorably to plaintiffs, as it must be on defendant’s motion, established the following facts: On November 7, 1955, at approximately 2:30 P.M., Mrs. Cohen entered the Food Fair Store in Coatesville, Pennsylvania and, as she took a full step into the building, her right foot slipped on the wet vestibule terrazzo floor and she landed on the base of her spine. The entire entrance floor was wet. After Mrs. Cohen fell, she noticed that there was water around her. She was wearing a heavy wool skirt and jacket, both of which were wet, muddy and dirty. She was wearing walking shoes with rubber heels. There was evidence introduced that it had been raining from mid-morning, approximately 10:30 A.M., until the time Mrs. Cohen fell at approximately 2:30 P.M. Another customer of defendant’s store testified that the vestibule was wet when she entered the store at about 2:15 P.M., and that it had been raining hard all day. The official weather report showed rain at the Coatesville *623 station for each hour from 11:00 A.M., through the rest of the day. The floor of the vestibule was a terrazzo floor and there was testimony from an architect as to the slippery qualities of terrazzo when wet, and the practice of placing rubber mats, abrasive strips or abrasive materials such as bird gravel on a wet terrazzo floor. Defendant had actual knowledge and notice of the danger to its customers. The store manager testified, when called by plaintiffs, that he put down bird gravel in the vestibule on rainy days to provide traction “so that there would be no cause for any slipping or that there wouldn’t be any slipperiness.” He further testified that he had not put down any bird gravel that day up to the time Mrs. Cohen reported that she had fallen. Mrs. Cohen had been a customer of the defendant for approximately five years prior to the accident. During that period she had shopped there on numerous occasions when it was raining, and had always been aware of the presence of a gritty substance on the floor of the vestibule. She relied on the same protection on the day of the accident, but the protection was not there.
On this appeal, appellant urges upon us that (1) plaintiff did not prove that the defendant was negligent; that (2) plaintiff has failed to prove either actual or constructive notice to defendant of the alleged dangerous condition; that (3) plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in deliberately stepping into the water which was visible, and (4) that the verdict of the jury was not so low as to justify the granting of a new trial. We shall consider these contentions separately.
(1) The testimony of the store manager clearly shows that he knew of the dangerous condition of the vestibule floor on rainy days. In view of his usual practice on rainy days and in view of the weather re
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ports as to the amount of rain which had fallen prioi to the accident, the issue whether bird gravel should have been placed on the floor to eliminate the slippery condition and to create traction was properly left for the consideration of the jury. In addition to the testimony of the store manager, expert testimony was introduced as to the slippery qualities of terrazzo floors when wet and the general practice resorted to to eliminate this condition. In view of the decision of our Supreme Court in
Burton v. Horn & Hardart Baking Co.,
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(2) The defendant had actual notice of the slippery condition of the floor in wet weather but, as stated •by the store manager, the weather conditions had not sufficiently advanced to take the customary and necessary precautions. Ordinarily, when nothing is shown beyond an existing condition itself, and there are no facts to impute knowledge of a dangerous condition, it becomes necessary to show that the condition had existed for a sufficient length of time to impute notice to the defendant. Here, however, the wet weather conditions periodically created a condition and the testimony disclosed that an established custom was adopted to eliminate the slippery condition caused thereby. The only question which required an answer was whether, under the conditions of the wet weather existing at the time of the injury, the customary procedure should have been followed. This situation is similar to the one considered by our Supreme Court in
Morris v. Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company,
(3) On the question of contributory negligence, the evidence disclosed that Mrs. Cohen opened the door on her first full step into the vestibule, which she observed was wet, and as she took either one or two more steps, she fell. Mrs. Cohen had shopped in the store on many rainy days during the five years before the accident and had always felt gravel or sand under her feet on such days and had not fallen. She had the right to assume that the usual precautions taken prior thereto would be taken on this day. Defendant’s contention that plaintiff deliberately stepped into the water, and *626 therefore was testing a known danger, is not borne out by the record.
Although plaintiff admittedly stepped into the puddle of water and that she had seen the water after the first step was taken, it cannot be said that this condition was so obviously dangerous as to have compelled her to stay away from it. The defendant bases its contributory negligence argument on the evidence elicited on cross-examination which might have been considered to be adverse to Mrs. Cohen. However, such testimony would still be for the jury.
Stevenson v. Pa. Sports & Enterprises, Inc.,
(4) We agree with the court below that the verdict, if any compensation is allowed, was inadequate. The evidence disclosed special damages in the amount of $1,959.50. The jury returned a verdict in the amount of $745.90 which was intended to cover medical expenses. If that was the intention of the jury, it is clear that this amount covered only a part of the medical expenses. The evidence, although conflicting as to the severity and duration of the injury, clearly disclosed compensable injury as a result of this accident. The jury allowed nothing for pain and suffering. To this extent, at least, the verdict of the jury was inconsistent.
The granting of a new trial is an inherent power and immemorial right of the trial court, and an appellate court will not find fault with the exercise of such authority in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion.
Lupi v. Keenan,
The judgment and orders of the court below are af* firmed.
