Appellant appeals the entry of judgment n. o. v. after a verdict returned in her favor for $26,300. She also appeals the alternative order of the trial court granting appel-lee a new trial unless appellant elects remit-titur of $11,300. We reverse.
Appellant sought damages for injuries sustained when she slipped and fell in a two-foot pool of liquid near the check-out line in appellee’s supermarket. The evidence, taken in the light most favorable to appellant, 1 tended to show that the liquid had been on the floor for at least twenty
*1175 minutes 2 and that it was approximately three feet from the check-out line and eight feet from where an assistant manager was standing at the time of the fall.
Appellant sought to prove that she was injured in the fall through her own testimony and that of a medical doctor, a general practitioner, who first examined her about four months after her fall. He testified that he examined appellant after taking her history and examining reports of X-rays taken by another physician, and that he was of the opinion that appellant was suffering the symptoms of a degenerative osteoar-thritic condition that pre-existed the fall but which had been asymptomatic until the fall. He opined that the then-present symptoms of back pain, headaches, and pain associated with lifting and bending were caused by the interaction of a lumbrosacral sprain, caused by the fall, upon this condition and that this sprain and the resulting symptoms would be permanent. He further testified that, as a result of these symptoms, appellant would be unable to engage in any prolonged employment. Another medical expert testified on behalf of appellee that appellant’s symptoms were not caused by the fall but by the pre-exist-ing condition, aggravated by her obesity, nine pregnancies, and age.
In addition to this evidence of injury, pain and suffering, appellant introduced evidence that she had incurred approximately $1,300 in medical bills and that, as a result of her symptoms, she had been unable to retain her employment. Appellant testified that she had applied for employment before the fall, had commenced working two months after the fall, and had worked for eleven months before her symptoms caused her to resign.
The trial court, in entering judgment for appellee n. o. v., held that appellant had not borne her burden of proving that appellee was negligent.
3
Appellant’s theory of the case was that the pool of liquid had existed for a sufficiently long period of time to warrant a jury finding that the appellee was on constructive notice of its existence.
Seganish v. District of Columbia Safeway Stores, Inc.,
Appellee, however, refers us to
Kelly v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
Appellee next argues, although the trial court did not hold, that the judgment n. o. v. was warranted on the theory of appellant’s contributory negligence. Appel-lee asserts that, had appellant “[paid] attention to where she was walking,” the accident would not have occurred. Were we to accept this contention, as a matter of law, then the duty imposed upon shopkeepers would be all but meaningless. Neither
Smith v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
D.C.App.,
The trial court further ruled that, should its judgment not be upheld, the ap-pellee should have a new trial unless appellant agreed to remit $11,300 of the verdict. Appellee submits that this alternative order is not reviewable on appeal, but, if reviewable, is proper. Appellee’s first contention is without merit. While an order granting a new trial is not appealable until judgment is entered after the new trial,
Taylor v. Washington Terminal Co.,
Because the views of the trial judge are, like those of a jury, entitled to considerable deference, “we will reverse the grant of a new trial for excessive verdict only where the quantum of damages found by the jury was
clearly
within ‘the maximum limit of a reasonable range.’ ”
Id.
at 114,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for entry of judgment upon the jury verdict.
So ordered.
Notes
.
Howard v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
D.C.App.,
. Appellant’s witness, another customer in the store, testified that when she entered the store twenty minutes before appellant’s fall the pool of liquid was on the floor and appeared to have been tracked through by a number of customers and shopping carts.
. The trial judge’s memorandum opinion stated that evidence that other customers had safely walked through the pool of liquid was conclusive proof that the existence of the pool was not a dangerous condition. Although we need not consider this ground for the entry of judgment n. o. v. since it is not argued on appeal, we note with approval the opinion that “evidence that no prior accident has occurred no more raises a conclusive presumption of due care, than evidence of a prior accident conclusively establishes negligence.”
Hilleary v. Earle Restaurant, Inc.,
. While the disposition of every case must rest upon the individual circumstances, we are confirmed in our conclusion here by the opinions of other courts in which the following time periods, during which foreign matter was on the floor, were held to present a jury question of constructive notice: 25 minutes,
Louie
v.
Hagstrom’s Food Stores, Inc.,
. Safeway Stores has not cross-appealed this denial. The trial court’s entry of judgment n. o. v. indicates only that the trial court believed that the facts proved were not a sufficient basis for appellee’s liability, not that the court believed the facts to be unproved. Had the trial court believed that the weight of the evidence did not support the liability-producing facts, then the proper alternative order under Super. Ct.Civ.R. 50(c)(1) would have been for a new trial, not for a new trial conditioned upon re-mittitur.
