Plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries sustained when she fell in defendant’s grocery store. The case was submitted to the jury which brought back a verdict for plaintiff. Upon defendant’s motion the trial court entered a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff, a 42 year old housewife, entered defendant’s store to buy some groceries. She walked to the back of the store where she stepped in a puddle of water on the floor and fell. She testified, “I stepped in a puddle of water and my foot goes under the cooler and I fall to my left knee and backward.”
The floor where plaintiff fell was of asbestos or vinyl tile. It was treated regularly every two weeks with skid resistant wax. The manager of the store was aware of the fact that water had leaked upon the floor from the cooler.
The trial court granted the motion for a judgment n.o.v. on the ground that “there was no evidence that the presence of water on the asbestos tile floor of the store made that area more slippery and hazardous.”
It is not necessary to establish by the direct
*516
testimony of witnesses the existence of every fact in a lawsuit. The jury is entitled to draw inferences from matters of common knowledge. Thus we recognized in
Meyers v. Oasis Sanitorium, Inc.,
The evidence established that after the floor was waxed and buffed the surface had a “glossy, shiny finish.” It is well known that ordinarily when water accumulates on a tile floor with a “glossy, shiny finish” a slippery condition is created. The slippery condition occurs because there is little molecular affinity between water and a hard shiny surface. And this would seem to be true even when the surface was made hard and shiny by the application and buffing of skid-retardant wax. If that is not true, it should be the burden of the defendant to introduce evidence explaining why the application of such wax operates to prevent a wet floor from becoming slippery.
It is contended that in our former opinions defining the duty of store owners to their patrons there was testimony that the presence of water on the floor made the floor slippery. Thus in
Pribble v. Safeway Stores,
Likewise, in
Collins v. Kienow’s Food Stores,
251
*517
Or 16, 17,
In the present case it would be very difficult to explain how plaintiff could have found herself in a position where one leg “goes under the cooler” and the knee of her other leg strikes the floor unless she slipped on something.
In
Woulfe v. Durst,
The judgment is reversed with direction to reinstate the verdict.
