88 Pa. Super. 449 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued April 15, 1926. This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to take off a non-suit in an action of trespass for personal injury.
On the night of Saturday, September 19, 1925, the plaintiff went to defendant's store to get some meat which he had ordered by telephone earlier in the evening. He arrived there at twenty minutes past eleven o'clock, when defendant's employees were about closing the store. While he waited for a customer ahead of him to be served, two of defendant's employees were oiling the floor with a floor dressing which was applied on Saturday nights once or twice a month. Plaintiff saw them applying the liquid but did not know what it was. When his package was handed to him he walked towards the front door and when about fifteen feet from the meat counter slipped and fell and broke his leg. Plaintiff was the only witness called to describe the fall and his testimony was confined to the statement that he walked about five yards from the butcher and slipped and fell down. There was no testimony that the floor oil was applied improperly, spread too thickly, or lay in pools; there was no direct evidence that it was the oil which caused plaintiff to slip and fall. No one testified to the slippery condition of the floor at the time and place where he fell; the plaintiff did not even say that he saw or felt any oil on the floor at that place. There was no evidence as to any oil being found on plaintiff's clothes when he was helped up or taken home, from which it might be inferred that any loose oil remained on the floor after the dressing had been applied. In short the case is barren of all testimony except that the floor had been oiled by defendant's employees, just previous to closing at the *451 end of the week and that plaintiff slipped and fell and was injured.
The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply to such a case. No liability attached to the defendant from the mere happening of the accident; it was necessary to prove some specific default or negligence on its part causing plaintiff's fall and injury, or the existence of conditions so obviously dangerous as to amount to evidence from which an inference of negligence would arise, before defendant could be held responsible in damages: Chapman v. Clothier,
The assignment of error is overruled and the judgment is affirmed.