323 Mass. 25 | Mass. | 1948
The plaintiff, a business visitor, was hurt when she slipped and fell on the floor of the defendant’s store. The judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and the correctness of that ruling is the only question presented by the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions.
The declaration alleged that the plaintiff “slipped and fell on the floor of said store, which floor was in an unsafe and dangerous condition, and which condition was known,
The only witness as to liability was the plaintiff, whose testimony was substantially the following: On September 9, 1944, about 4 p.m. she entered the store to pay a bill. After sitting down on a chair to get out her money, she started to walk to the cashier’s desk. She had walked four or five feet “when she felt her left foot slip and she felt something on it,” and she fell on her left side. She was picked up and seated in a chair from where she observed a spot on the floor where she fell which was “yellow and moist, an ordinary spot there” and about eight inches long by eight inches wide. There was a mark about a foot long which “started in the middle of the moist, yellow place . . . and ran a little ways out.” She felt her left heel with her fingers, and discovered a substance which was “sticky and moist”; “whatever was on her shoe was sticky and oily”; “it was slippery and sticky.” The floor was of brown linoleum.
The plaintiff introduced in evidence certain of the defendant’s answers to interrogatories propounded by the plaintiff. In these it was stated that the floor was swept about 1 p.m. (interrogatory 9); and that liquid floor wax was used in waxing the floor (interrogatory 20). The defendant then introduced in evidence
On the other hand, the plaintiff’s specifications limited her to proof that the cause of her fall was wax and nothing else. Shea v. Crompton & Knowles Loom Works, 305 Mass. 327, 329. Stewart v. Morgan, 316 Mass. 164, 165. Lishner v. Bleich, 319 Mass. 350, 352. Snow v. Metropolitan Transit Authority, ante, 21, 24. The question then becomes whether on the evidence such a finding could properly be made. We are of opinion that it could not. Zanes v. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co. 298 Mass. 569. The plaintiff not only failed to use the word “wax,” but the language she did use left the nature of the substance in a state of uncertainty and conjecture. Mucha v. Northeastern Crushed Stone Co. Inc. 307 Mass. 592, 597, and cases cited. Allan v. Essanee, Inc. 309 Mass. 1, 7. Starr v. Chafitz, 317 Mass. 227, 230. Williams v. United Men’s Shop, Inc. 317 Mass. 319, 321. Gilmore v. Kilbourn, 317 Mass. 358, 363. Burwick v. McClure, 318 Mass. 626, 630. In Ventromile v. Malden Electric Co. 317 Mass. 132, the substance was described as wax in the testimony.
Exceptions overruled.
G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 89. Reid v. Bacas, 317 Mass. 240, 242. DiAngelo v. United Markets Inc. 319 Mass. 143, 146.