Emory University brought this appeal involving a slip-and-fall case instituted by Mrs. Elizabeth H. Williams. Visiting her husband, a patient at the *882 Emory University Hospital, Mrs. Williams patronized the student cafeteria for her evening meal on March 30, 1969. Having had relatives previously hospitalized at this institution she was familiar with these eating facilities being available to others than students and that customers were expected to return their trays to a certain rack after completion of their meals. As she approached the designated location for this purpose the incident occurred which she described as "I was ready to lift it to put it on the rack when I put my left foot onto the floor, it slipped and I fell instantly with the tray in my hands. It was just so fast, you could hardly believe it.” (T. 9.) She sustained serious injuries for which the jury awarded her a substantial verdict. This appeal does not attack that verdict but seeks to nullify it by defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict based upon a motion for directed verdict made at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence which had been renewed after defendant’s evidence had been presented.
1. Having been schooled to seek cases quatuor pedibus currit, sometimes called "A white horse case” or its modern counterpart,
1
"A green elevator case,” we have made a special study of those slip-and-fall decisions by our court involving restaurants. Chronologically, these are
Pilgreen v. Hanson,
There are of course other general principles applicable to this case. Of these the most important is that plaintiff has the burden to make out a factual case legally suffi *884 cient to create a jury issue. The transcript shows this was not done. We quote pertinent portions of plaintiffs testimony: "Q. Was there anything different about your foot when you put it down that time as opposed to when you put it down as you were walking over there? A. There was something that caused it to slip instantly. It had not been on the floor until I put my left foot on the floor. Had I been able to complete that step, I would have had my tray on the rack . . . Q. All right. Now, when you put that foot down and it slipped, in putting the foot down was it any different from the way you put your foot down in getting to that point walking on this same floor? A. In the way I put my foot down? Q. How it felt under your foot? A. It just felt slick, just suddenly and I had just time to realize it was something. It was slick and then I — down. A. Had it felt slick before that as you were walking to that point? A. No, it had not.” (T. 9, 10.)
Cross examination developed the following: "Q. Now tell the jury if as you walked from your table to the food rack, and, say, when you got within from beginning, say, from a point ten or twelve feet from the rack, did you see anything on the floor, Mrs. Williams? A. No, I didn’t. Q. Nothing in the way of a substance, or foreign substance? A. No. Q. Had there been something on the floor there was nothing to obscure your view of it, was there? A. You could only see as well as you could see, and on a floor of that type you can’t unless the light happens to hit a particle or anything just right, you can’t tell whether it was there or not. Q. You had seen particles on the floor on previous occasions? A. Yes. Q. You saw no such particles? A. Not as I walked across the floor. Q. On March 30, 1969? A. That’s right. Q. And until your left foot slipped, as you say, just as you were a matter of inches from the food tray, that was the first sensation of a. slipperiness that you had had that entire evening, is that correct? A. That’s correct. Q. Now did you examine your shoe or did anyone examine your shoe *885 following the accident? A. Not that I know of. Q. To see if something might be on the bottom surface of your shoe? A. No, I couldn’t have, and no one else thought of it. Q. You have no idea what it was on the floor? A. No. Q. That made you slip, if anything? A. It was something different and something slippery, because I had walked across the floor with no difficulty.” (T. 46-48.)
From the foregoing it will be observed plaintiff did not prove the existence of a foreign substance. She does indicate that there was a different consistency in the floor at that one spot where her left foot came down, but this alleged construction defect would not be sufficient to take her case to the jury. See
Holloman v. Henry Grady Hotel Co.,
The employees of defendant testified concerning their cleaning routine and the presence of a supervisor to make certain of the immediate removal of spillage. The dining room supervisor stated she had at the time of the fall "examined the floor myself to find water or anything. I found nothing. I even got down there with my hands, found nothing on the floor but the food that was wasted.” (T. 116-117.) Although her counsel contends ordinary care imposed a duty upon the restaurateur to place a mat at this tray return location "what the law requires is not warranty of the safety of everybody from everything, but such diligence toward making the store safe as a good businessman is in such matters accustomed to use.”
McCrory Stores Corp. v. Ahern,
Plaintiff also testifed that defendant’s employee said "You are the second person that has fallen today.” (T. 13.) According to
Ferry v. Collins,
2. Plaintiff’s counsel argues defendant owes a greater duty of care to plaintiff due to two factors: (a) Plaintiff was required to carry her tray to the racks after her meal. This thesis is negated in
Angel v. Varsity, Inc.,
Although the plaintiff was wearing low-heel loafers, was looking in the direction in which she was walking and had a clear view of the floor from her table to the racks, her "innocence does not necessarily establish the negligence of the defendant.”
Cook v. Kroger Baking & Grocery Co.,
3. Since plaintiff presented no evidence that a substance existed and defendant’s evidence is to the contrary; since defendant had neither actual nor constructive notice of the presence of any foreign substance on the floor; since defendant was not negligent and breached no duty of care owed to the plaintiff, the lower court erred in not granting defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. For similar holdings on slip-and-fall cases either on general demurrer, nonsuit, summary judgment, or directed verdict, see
Collins v. S. H. Kress Co.,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Senior lawyers direct their juniors to find a controlling legal authority that is identical in all respects even to the color of the involved instrumentality.
Pablo Picasso is still painting at 90; Leopold Stokowski is still conducting at 90; and Pablo Casals is still playing the cello at 95. Cf. Cicero wrote his immortal De Senectute at the age of 86.
