This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit in a trial before a jury. The action was one for the recovery of damages suffered by the plaintiff when she fell in an aisle-way in the market of the defendant.
Pertinent testimony on the issue of liability will be summarized. The plaintiff testified that on February 25, 1958, between 2:30 and 3 o’clock in the afternoon, she was in the food market for the purpose of shopping. As she proceeded down an aisleway between two counters, pushing her shopping cart, she felt something on her foot which reminded her of a skate. She did not see the object before she stepped on it. It was a rack, rectangular in shape, made of dark metal, and was “possibly from 24 to maybe 28 inches long.” Its position was in the middle of the aisle between the counters. When her foot hit it, it moved along the floor. As she tried to prevent the fall, she went sideways and hit her head on a bin or table. She saw no man, woman or child in the area of her fall, except that she vaguely remembered seeing a woman. She" did not recall seeing anyone in the aisleway or any children playing around the area before she reached that section. The next day, the assistant manager showed her the broken or displaced rack and the table against which she had fallen.
*393 On cross-examination, the plaintiff stated that the grill-like object upon which she stepped was the “bottom row” oí a display stand. She did not know whether it was entirely out of place or partially in place on the display stand but only that she stepped on it and it “slid” with her. Thereafter she testified that the rack or shelf was away from the stand but she did not know how far away it was. She was looking at the merchandise on the shelves. The accident occurred at some point between certain vegetable counters and another counter, the contents of which the plaintiff did not know.
The assistant manager of the store, Ragnar Back, was called as a witness by the plaintiff under the provisions of section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure. One of his duties was to see that the aisleways were safe and unobstructed. In answer to a question as to whether he had been through the store 10 or 15 minutes before the accident was reported to him, he answered: “No doubt. I’m all over the store.” He further testified: “ Q. Do you recall being down in this section of the store near the vegetable counter and the grocery counters that afternoon ! A. I probably had been by there a number of times. Q. Do you remember if you were down in that section—how long before this accident was reported to you! A. Well, I couldn’t tell you exactly how long before that because when a person is in and around all day long, you don’t keep exact time, but I had been through that section there, the frozen food section, which I take care of, and write orders for, and I’m down that way quite often, as well as other parts of the store. Q. Do you have any routine or regular-route that you follow in checking your aisleways! A. Well, they are cheeked daily as you go along all the time. You are always constant [sic] on the alert for it. Q. Do you use any route or method to make sure that all the aisles are checked! A. Well, you are constantly checking it all the time as you are going through. Q. Is there anyone else that checks it besides you! A. Oh, yes, the manager. He checks it. Q. Was the manager on duty with you that date! A. Yes, he was. Q. Where was he! Do you know! A. I don’t recall where he was at that time. Q. I will ask you again, do you have any method of or particular route that you follow in inspecting the vegetable counters! Do you walk around each bin or do you have any method, and then go back to the back of the store! A. You don’t use the same method each day. I mean, one day you inay corfie from one side and the other day from the other side, but you inspect as you go along each day.” He described the display stand *394 and the removable racks or shelves thereon. At the time of the accident, he saw the plaintiff on the floor between the bread table and the vegetable rack or bin. When asked if he could state from his recollection when it was that he had passed this particular spot prior to the accident, he answered: “Well, I couldn’t tell you the exact time I went by there in the routine of the day’s work, you are going by there any number of times, but the exact time I could not say. ’ ’ He came on duty that day at 1 o’clock in the afternoon. After being asked if he could state if he had passed this location from that time until he saw the plaintiff on the floor, his testimony was as follows: “No doubt I did. I couldn’t say exactly what time, no doubt I have, because—when, during the course of the day, when I come in there-The Court : It is only a matter of memory. Do you remember whether you did or not ? The Witness : No doubt I have been. The Court : What do you mean ‘no doubt’? Do you remember that you did? It is a question of memory. The Witness : Well, to say that you have gone by between that time, I would say that I had, yes. Q. By Mr. Griffin [counsel for Plaintiff] : Do you remember looking at the rack or anything to refresh your recollection about seeing this rack on that day? A. No. If there is nothing out of the ordinary, you just walk by and that’s it. Q. I believe your statement is that you think you walked by the rack? A. I think I no doubt did. Q. Do you recall whether the bottom shelf of that rack was hooked onto the stand, or whether it was lying on the floor? Do you remember? A. I don’t remember. Q. When this rack is hooked or when it is in place, how far off the floor would it be? A. Oh, approximately 6 or 8 inches. Q. That would be up the side of the stand and hooked in ? A. Yes. Q. If it were lying flat on the floor, how high, how far off the ground would it stand, or what would be the thickness of it? A. Approximately a quarter of an inch or three-eights [sic].” There was a vegetable man employed in the store but part of his time was spent in a back room. The witness could not state at what time the floor was swept on that afternoon. He did not know what caused the plaintiff to fall.
In determining whether the granting of a nonsuit was proper, the appellate court must resolve every conflict in the evidence in favor of the plaintiff, consider every inference which can reasonably be drawn and every presumption which can fairly be deemed to arise in support of the plaintiff, and accept as true all evidence adduced, direct and indirect, which tends to sustain the ease of the plaintiff.
(Coates
v.
Chinn,
*395
The law applicable to the issue of negligence in this ease has been succinctly stated in
Hatfield
v.
Levy Brothers,
*396
In the ease presently before this court, the evidence sustained an inference that the shelf or rack was on the floor in the aisleway and constituted a hazard to shoppers. There was no direct evidence as to the period of time which elapsed between the moment when such object, by whatever means or cause, was placed in that position and the time of the accident. However, the assistant manager, whose duty it was to inspect the premises for conditions which would imperil patrons, was unable to state just when there had been an inspection of the area of the accident in the one and a half or two hours which elapsed between the time he entered upon his duties and the accident. The governing law was stated by Mr. Chief Justice Gibson in
Bridgman
v.
Safeway Stores, Inc., supra,
In
Hale
v.
Safeway Stores, Inc.,
In Sapp v. W.
T. Grant Co.,
*398 It is thus clear that the plaintiff was entitled to have her case submitted to the jury and that the judgment entered upon the granting of the nonsuit must be reversed, unless other matters sustain the determination of the trial court. We turn now to such matters.
The respondent asserts that: “Plaintiff could have seen or observed the location of the shelf in the middle of the aisle had she exercised ordinary care and caution during her shopping tour in the market; the location of the shelf in the middle of the aisle was open, apparent, obvious and visible to plaintiff, and the location of the shelf in the center of the aisle was
not a latent or concealed peril.
’ ’ The appellant testified that she did not see the object on the floor before she actually stepped on it but she did see it as she stepped on it. She said: “It was a dark metal, black, where it was dark metal.” Before her fall, she was looking at the merchandise on the shelves. It cannot be said that, as a matter of law, the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence. The reasoning of the court in
Louie
v.
Hagstrom’s Food Stores, supra,
The inference to be drawn from the appellant’s testimony was that her fall was caused by a shelf or rack which had been removed from the display stand and was lying on the floor of the aisleway. However, in her complaint it was alleged; "That at said time and place, as aforesaid, Defendants and each of them carelessly and negligently maintained and operated said premises in such a manner so as to cause a display rack to be placed in one of the aisles or walkways used by the patrons of said business, that Plaintiff, while walking along said aisle or walkway, was tripped by said display rack and caused to fall to the floor of said premises. ’ ’ But there is no indication in the record that the respondent was harmed by any variance between the pleading and the proof. In this connection, it is to be noted that the deposition of the plaintiff had been taken. The applicable law is stated in
Lehmann
v.
Mitchell,
In the light in which the evidence must be viewed on a motion for a judgment of nonsuit, it is clear that the motion should not have been granted.
Reversed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
