The petition of Evelyn Frist v. U. S. 5 & 10c Stores, Inc., eliminating descriptions of her injuries and damages and immaterial portions, alleged: “2. That, on the 13th day of January, 1962, about 2 p.m., the day was overcast, and the sidewalks were covered with slush and snow. Plaintiff was walking southwardly on the west sidewalk in Rossville, Georgia, in front of the aforesaid place of business, shopping and looking in store windows for various personal articles that she might need, with a view to purchasing the same if she found such articles, and, for this reason, she was walking close to the walls of the store buildings so as to observe their merchandise better. She was wearing shoes with a small pointed heel of ordinary size and height for dress wear. A mat made of rubber or similar substance about an inch thick with holes therein approximately one inch in diameter and two inches apart was protruding forward from the entrance of said place of business over and beyond the edge of the store wall and out into the sidewalk approximately 18 inches. Said mat was not readily visible because the aforesaid snow and slush covered the same, and the same was slick and wet from the slush, snow and moisture. Plaintiff’s right side was nearest the store and her left side was nearest the curb. As plaintiff was walking down the street engaged in the business aforesaid exercising due care for her own safety, she did not see the aforesaid mat, and had no reason in the exercise of ordinary care to anticipate its presence there, her left heel caught in the same, throwing plaintiff violently forward and to the left, throwing her out of her shoe, inflicting the injuries hereinafter complained of. 3. That defendant owed a duty to the public and the individual members thereof to exercise ordinary care in keeping the approaches to said store free from obstacles and dangers of its own creation, and that the defendant, if it had exercised ordinary care, could have foreseen that its act in leaving the aforesaid object in the aforesaid position under the aforesaid circumstances created a danger to the public and to the individual members thereof, of which injury to the public and to the individual members thereof suóh as those suffered by plaintiff was a natural and probable consequence. 4. That defendant was negligent in
General and special demurrers were filed to the petition. At the hearing thereon, the trial judge sustained the general demurrer, and the case is before this court on exceptions to that ruling.
It appears from the allegations of the petition that the injury to the plaintiff would not have occurred but for the door mat extending approximately 18 inches onto the sidewalk in front of the defendant’s store. Unless the defendant (1) placed the mat in such position, or (2) acquired actual knowledge thereof, or (3) the mat was there a sufficient length of time for the defendant, in the exercise of ordinary care to have discovered the same, there is no liability on the part of the defendant for any injuries occasioned to the plaintiff thereby.
The only portions of the petition which, with any degree of reasonableness, can be contended to contain such allegations is paragraph 3 and specification of negligence number 2. The first part of paragraph 3, “That defendant owed a duty to the public and the individual members thereof to exercise ordinary care in keeping the approaches to said store free from obstacles and dangers of its own creation,” is not a statement of fact but a statement of law, and even if construed as a statement of fact as to “dangers of its own creation,” is one of ultimate fact necessary to be supported by other allegations of fact; otherwise,
The word “leave” has several meanings, among them the following: (1) to allow or cause to remain; (2) to let remain unremoved; (3) to let be without interference; (4) to put, place, deposit, deliver, or the like so as to allow to remain. The words, “in leaving,” when construed in connection with that portion of the sentence, “under the aforesaid circumstances,” cannot
In Dempsey v. Smith,
This court in Broyles v. Johnson,
The indirect allegation of fact contained in the specification of negligence No. 2 that the defendant was negligent “in permitting the aforesaid obstruction [the mat] to extend . . . upon the public sidewalk,” does not cure the defectiveness of
Neither do the pleadings show constructive notice of the location of the mat, for it is not specifically alleged that the defendant should have discovered it by the exercise of ordinary care, nor do the facts alleged authorize such a conclusion in the absence of an allegation as to the length of time the mat had been so placed. Cook v. Kroger Baking &c. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
