Lead Opinion
This action was brought against Piggly Wiggly Southern for injuries sustained when appellant Colbert slipped and fell. The evidence shows the fall occurred on a rainy day, although there is dispute whether it was raining at the time of Mrs. Colbert’s fall. It is undisputed that Mrs. Colbert entered appellee’s store and stepped onto a dark mat that was placed inside the door to catch dirt and water, and as she stepped off the rug onto the floor, her right foot slipped on the floor. A store courtesy clerk had been regularly mopping the area, had just finished mopping up water around the mat, and had left a mop and bucket nearby partially concealed by a door. Mrs. Colbert never saw any water on the floor; however, after she fell, she felt the floor
On motion for summary judgment, appellee produced the recent case of McGauley v. Piggly-Wiggly Southern,
1. This case is distinguished from McGauley, supra, in that this plaintiff gives undisputed evidence that she slipped upon a damp or wet floor, while in McGauley the plaintiff did not know how or why she slipped.
In 1965, we issued a comprehensive opinion on the issue of liability in cases of slip and fall specifically on floors made wet by rain conditions. Gibson v. Consolidated Credit Corp.,
“Even if the rainfall had ceased completely [as Mrs. Colbert contends in this case] it seems obvious that the defendant, and others in a like position, must be afforded a reasonable opportunity for mopping the water from the floor. Until such time as one who enters might reasonably expect to find the floor free of water he should expect to find water present.” Gibson, supra, p. 177.
The appellee’s employee had been assigned to mop the doorway regularly because of accumulating water and told Mrs. Colbert he had just finished mopping the area where Mrs. Colbert fell. This was rea
It is noted that in Weight Watchers v. Welborn,
2. Appellant asks us to decry the equal knowledge/superior knowledge rule as being illogical, untenable and distortive of the issues in a negligence case. Appellant contends the superior knowledge rule is not “the true ground of liability” of the owner of business property to invitees. Gibson, supra, p. 173. Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Reid,
Appellant also contends the equal knowledge rule should be repudiated because it amounts to an imposition of assumption of risk upon the plaintiff, whereas there are several situations where the plaintiff’s equal knowledge will not prevent recovery. See Alterman Foods, supra, p. 623; City of Silvertown v. Harcourt,
The situations described in Alterman Foods, supra, p. 623 and City of Silvertown v. Harcourt, supra, p. 160 (3), where equal knowledge would not as a matter of law prevent recovery, are in fact situations where the plaintiff’s knowledge of the defect is not truly equal. Where the knowledge is truly equal, and not mitigated by some justifying emergency, the rule is that the plaintiff is “equally guilty of a lack of ordinary care in voluntarily subjecting himself to the risk, and can not recover.” City of Silvertown v. Harcourt, supra, p. 161 (4). The basis of this rule is the plaintiff’s own duty to exercise ordinary care for his own safety, and his duty to avoid the effect of the proprietor’s negligence after it becomes apparent to him or in the exercise of ordinary care he should have learned of it. “He must make use of all his senses in a reasonable measure amounting to ordinary care in discovering and avoiding those things that might cause hurt to him. [Cits.]” Alterman Foods, supra, p. 623.
Finally, appellant contends the equal/superior knowledge rule distorts principles of comparative negligence, which should govern. She urges that the precise issue is not the plaintiff’s knowledge but should be “whether he exposed himself to a foreseeable unreasonable risk of harm,” and that while the jury should be weighing the comparative negligence of the parties, the equal knowledge rule in fact operates to bar any recovery. However, we fail to see any conflict between the two principles. The law of comparative negligence in operation in
3. The appellee’s motion for summary judgment was based on McGauley v. Piggly Wiggly, supra, and upon the assertion that “[plaintiff] had equal knowledge of any unsafe condition or hazard on defendant’s premises and thus voluntarily assumed the risk and dangers incident to the known condition.” Appellant contends that since the plaintiff did not have notice of any other grounds it is impermissible to rule on the motion on any other grounds, as we did in Division 1 of this opinion. “ ‘As has been pointed out in 6 Moore’s Federal Practice 2244, § 56.12, the majority of the Federal Courts have sanctioned the trial judge’s grant of summary judgment in favor of a party who does not formally move for the same. A court may properly grant summary judgment on a ground other than that assigned in the motion where it is clear there is no genuine issue of material fact. 6 Moore’s Federal Practice 2254, 2255, n. 14, § 56.14 [1]. The crucial point is to insure that the party against whom summary judgment is sought has had a full and final opportunity to meet and attempt to controvert the assertions against him.’ Applegarth Supply Co. v. Schaffer,
In the case just quoted, the issue was whether a trial court may grant summary judgment on a claim other than the one upon which summary judgment is sought. In Applegarth Supply Co. v. Schaffer, supra, summary judgment was affirmed although it had been granted upon a count for which no motion had been made. In Beazley v. Williams,
It is the duty of each party at the hearing on the motion to present his case in full (Summer-Minter, supra, p. 604), and, to prevail, the defendant-movant must produce evidence which negates at least one essential element “under every theory fairly drawn from the pleadings and the evidence.” Lockhart v. Beaird,
4. Appellant urges us to repudiate McGauley, supra, because it improperly shifted the burden to the plaintiff to make her case without the defendant’s having to show first a prima facie entitlement to summary judgment, and specifically because the McGauley decision does not mention any competent evidence that there was no defective condition in the rug or floor. Appellant is in error. The Supreme Court held in Alterman Foods, supra, at p. 624, that “ ‘proof of nothing more than the occurrence of the fall is insufficient to establish the proprietor’s negligence’ [cit.] . . . Thus, the plaintiff must, at a minimum show that the defendant was negligent. . . .”
Summary judgment was granted to the defendant in McGauley because the record showed defendant had been mopping all day and had mopped the floor a few minutes before McGauley fell, and was not negligent in maintaining the floor under the rainy conditions; the burden then shifted to McGauley to produce issuable evidence or suffer judgment. Her mere allegation that she fell was insufficient to create an issue of fact as to negligence. Alterman Foods, supra; Key v. J. C. Penney, supra. This is not a situation for res ipsa loquitur. Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Reid, supra, p. 138.
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially.
Based upon my review of the entire record in this case, I feel that I am compelled to concur in the result reached by the majority. Alterman Foods v. Ligon,
Lead Opinion
On Motion for Rehearing.
On motion for rehearing, appellant Colbert contends that our decision in Gibson v. Consolidated Credit Corp.,
Appellant contends an issue of fact remains whether appellee or its employee was negligent in improperly or incompletely mopping the area; however, the decision was based upon appellee’s exercise of ordinary care to protect against unreasonable risk of harm by mopping the area of the rug (Gibson, supra, p. 177) and, paramountly, appellant’s equal knowledge of the inherent risk of water and dampness in doorways during rainy days. See Brownlow, supra.
Rehearing denied.
