279 Mass. 14 | Mass. | 1932
The plaintiff, in company with her husband, went to the store of the defendant for the purpose of pur
The question of law presented for decision is whether or not the presence of the tack as described constituted an actionable defect in the stairway. Many cases have been decided by this court where a nail or other substance protruding above the floor, steps or other place has caused a person to fall and thereby receive a personal injury. In these cases the general question as to the extent to which such nail or other substance protruded above the step or ' floor has been deemed important in deciding whether it constituted an actionable defect. See Young v. Snell, 200 Mass. 242; Shavelson v. Marcus, 273 Mass. 237; Solomon v. Boston Elevated Railway, 276 Mass. 139; Jennings v. Tompkins, 180 Mass. 302; Johnson v. Fainstein, 219 Mass. 537; Leslie v. Glazer, 273 Mass. 221.
The evidence of the plaintiff in the present case was- to the effect that the tack upon which she caught her foot
Exceptions overruled..