Patricia Ann Hardin (plaintiff) brought an action against Super Discount Market, Inc. (defendant), seeking damages for injuries she allegedly sustained when she slipped and fell at defendant’s grocery store. Defendant denied the material allegations of the complaint and filed a motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiff testified during a deposition that she slipped and fell in a puddle of milk while shopping near the dairy section of defendant’s *647 grocery store. Plaintiff explained that she was on her way to retrieve orange juice at the time of the fall; that she did not see the spilled milk before the fall and that the milk puddle was in an area of about “2 or 3 feet. . . .” Plaintiff also testified that she observed “buggy marks” and shoe prints in the milk puddle and that this drew her to the conclusion that the spilled milk “had been spread out by different buggies pushing through it.” Plaintiff filed an affidavit and further explained that “immediately after [she] fell and looked up [she saw] a store clerk that apparently had been stocking shelves in the bakery section and [that] this Clerk did have a full and complete view of the area where [plaintiff] fell in that there are no obstructions from where [the clerk] was standing that would have blocked [the clerk’s] view of the milk spill.” Plaintiff also deposed that “[a]t the time of [the] fall [she] was walking between two freezers and looking slightly to [her] left and up to locate the refrigerated section where orange juice was displayed [and that it] was at that moment that [she] fell.”
Phillip Smith testified during a deposition that he was employed as a “[l]oss prevention clerk” at defendant’s grocery store on the day of plaintiff’s fall and that his responsibilities included visually inspecting the store for “anything that anybody could get hurt on. . . .” Smith further testified that he assisted plaintiff after the fall but the deposition transcript reveals that he did not independently recall specific details of the incident. However, Smith recalled that he had been in the area where plaintiff fell “[m]aybe fifteen, twenty, or so” minutes before the incident and that he did not then observe the milk puddle. Smith also testified that he did not recall asking the clerk in the nearby bakery department if she saw the spill, but he explained that “it’s like everyone’s responsibility on cleaning up spills, and what to do if they observe or walk up on a spill, how to handle it.”
The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed. Held:
“While a proprietor is liable to invitees for his failure to exercise ordinary care in keeping the premises safe, to establish a proprietor’s liability for a slip and fall attributable to a foreign substance on the floor, the customer must show that the proprietor knew of the foreign substance or should have known of it had ordinary care been exercised.
Alterman Foods v. Ligon,
“When an action is based on constructive knowledge, to avoid summary judgment for the defendant, the plaintiff must establish a question of fact whether the foreign substance remained on the floor for a sufficient length of time for knowledge of it to be imputed to the proprietor, showing that he had an opportunity to discover the defect and correct it.
Smith v. Wal-Mart Stores,
Judgment reversed.
