163 So. 447 | Miss. | 1935
Appellant, an invitee of appellee, while walking from her room on the third floor of appellee's hospital, on Monday, January 1, 1934, fell and broke her arm, which injury she avers was solely because of the highly polished, slick, slippery, and dangerous condition of the waxed linoleum-covered floor of the hallway upon which she was walking. It was shown by the undisputed testimony that the linoleum was the regulation Armstrong Battleship Linoleum of the same type and character in common use in stores, office buildings, and in other public buildings everywhere, and that it was installed in the customary and proper manner; that it was regularly cleaned and waxed on Friday of each week, and on no other day, in which process Fries Paste Floor Wax was used, this being the wax which was recommended for that purpose by the manufacturers of linoleum, and that the waxing was carefully done and the finish thereof was left in the manner as directed by the manufacturer, and that although this particular linoleum had been upon the floors of appellee's hospital for about eight years, and had been regularly cleaned and waxed as aforesaid, and had been in the daily use of numerous people throughout all that time, no previous injury had ever occurred from the use of the floors of the building. *838
The trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant; and, upon this appeal, a wealth of cases has been cited in the briefs. Appellant relies upon a line of cases of which Hohlt Co. v. Routt (Tex. Civ. App.),
In cases of this character, as in others involving like duties, "the test is not danger, but negligence; and negligence is the failure to take such reasonable care as is taken or should be taken by experienced and prudent men." Hammontree v. Cobb Const. Company,
It is the more dependable from the standpoints both of practicability and of justice to look to the customary, generally recognized and commonly observed standards in any long-established line of business or occupation, when that business or occupation has many members, and to the sanctions of tried experience in such business or occupation for guidance as to what is adequate and proper therein rather than to elevate, above the sanctions of such long-tried and general experience, the notions or preferences of a particular jury, many of whose members have had no experience whatever in that business and sometimes with little or no opportunity for particular observation of it, save only that the courts and juries shall possess the reserved right to overrule any such customary standards of any business when the standards adopted and observed by that business are nevertheless so unreasonably unsafe, and so obviously so, that impartial persons could not well be in disagreement upon the issue, and, as we have already stated, such is the rule of law in this state.
Since the testimony establishes by an adequate array of witnesses, both expert and lay, without dispute, that the linoleum floor, which is complained of in this case, substantially as constructed and substantially as maintained *840 by this appellee, is and has been for a long time in common and general use, under substantially the same method of maintenance, in stores, office buildings, and other such buildings where members of the public are invited to visit and do visit in unnumbered thousands every day and everywhere, and since the testimony fails to show that such installation, maintenance, and use is so unreasonably unsafe and impartial persons could hardly be in disagreement upon the issue, we must concur with the learned trial judge, unless we are authorized to make a distinction and lay down a different rule as to hospitals. But when we note that the aged, the infirm, and the sick, in great numbers, daily visit physicians' offices in office buildings and visit as well in stores and other like places, we must at once conclude that we are not warranted in attempting the suggested distinction.
Affirmed.