The liability of the defendant for the plaintiff’s injuries occurring within the defendant’s place of business is partially dependent upon the status of the plaintiff in the store. To support his contention that the plaintiff was merely a volunteer to whom the defendant owed only the duty not to wilfully and wantonly injure him, the defendant in error cites
Early v. Houser,
The plaintiff, being an invitee, because of mutuality of interest, was due ordinary care, and questions of negligence, whose negligence, and what negligence, except in plain and indisputable cases, are for the determination of the jury.
Martin v. Henson,
Although the petition alleged that the plaintiff had ascended and descended the ladder 8 or 9 times and therefore might have *28 had an opportunity to notice the slippery condition, it was also alleged that the substance was not readily visible, so the issues of whether the defendant exercised due care in providing the plaintiff with a ladder on which there was a hazardous condition and of whether the plaintiff could have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence, if any, should have been submitted to a jury.
Judgment reversed.
