Helen Echols brought this action against Whisker’s Food & Spirits, a restaurant, after she fell down a step. She alleged that the step was not observable to her because the restaurant was poorly lit, the carpet covering the step was dark, and no warning signs were posted that a step down was approaching. The trial court granted summary judgment to Whisker’s. Because the record shows that Whisker’s did not have knowledge of a dangerous condition superior to that of Echols, we affirm.
Construed in Echols’s favor, evidence was presented on motion for summary judgment that Echols and her two daughters entered Whisker’s during the afternoon of March 12, 1995. They ordered lunch, and Echols drank about a half-glass of beer. It is undisputed that all three women successfully negotiated a step up to reach their table. 1 When they began to leave the restaurant about an hour later, they went down the same step they had previously climbed, and Echols fell, injuring herself.
To avoid summary judgment, it was incumbent upon Echols to show that Whisker’s had superior knowledge of the alleged defect.
Souder v. Atlanta Family Restaurants,
We recognize that in some cases we have held summary judgment to the proprietor to be inappropriate, even when the plaintiff may have recently traversed the area where he or she fell. For example, in
Newell v. Great A & P Tea Co.,
But here, the defect was a step. It was not an alleged hazardous condition of which an individual might not necessarily have been aware, such as a small tear in a mat, as in
Newell,
or an invisible sheet of “black ice,” as in
Martin v. Dunwoody-Shallowford Partners,
We note testimony by Echols and her daughters that a Whisker’s customer told them he had seen several people fall in the same manner that Echols fell. This hearsay testimony does not show knowledge on the part of Whisker’s of any such falls, nor does it negate the fact that Echols successfully traversed the step only about an hour before she fell. Summary judgment in favor of Whiskers was therefore appropriate.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Although Echols testified during her deposition that she did not recall ascending the step as she walked to her table, she acknowledged “from a logical standpoint” that if she fell down a step, she must have ascended it at some time. In addition and more importantly, the testimony of at least one of her daughters shows that all three women walked up the same step which they descended about an hour later.
