The plaintiff had left her car at the defendant's place of business to have slip covers affixed to the seats. While about to inspect it in the defendant's yard at the suggestion and in the company of the defendant's agent, she stepped upon a "creeper," a frame set on casters used by mechanics to lie upon while working underneath cars, and was thrown to the ground, suffering personal injuries for which she brought this action. There were twelve or fourteen creepers on the defendant's premises, owned and used by the defendant's mechanics. The frames were about three feet long and fifteen inches wide and the casters were about two inches in height. It was upon the protruding corner of one of these creepers, the rest of which was beneath her car, that the plaintiff stepped. The defendant's yard adjoined his repair garage and was surfaced with a concrete pavement. The plaintiff's car was just outside the garage door and was one of several in the yard. *Page 350
The plaintiff obtained a verdict which the, defendant moved to set aside as against the law and the evidence. From the court's denial of the motion the defendant appealed, assigning as a ground of error that there was no evidence of actual or constructive knowledge by the defendant of the position of the creeper.
The record discloses no evidence as to the length of time the creeper had been in this position that would support a claim of constructive notice. Laflin v. Lomas Nettleton Co.,
The defendant relies upon Meyer v. St. Augustine's Church,
In the instant case it is not questioned that a dangerous condition was at once created by the placing of the creeper in the position in which it caused the injury, and it seemed a reasonable conclusion, not alone to the jury but to the court, which refused to set aside the verdict (see Scorpion v. American-Republican, Inc.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.