This is an appeal from the order of the state court granting the motion for summary judgment in behalf of appellee, The Kroger Company, in a suit for damages arising from the slip and fall of a child, age five years and eight months, in appellee’s store.
The trial court in granting the motion for summary judgment *418 noted: “The duty of the landowner to an invitee is to exercise ordinary care to warn of hazardous or perilous conditions, that requirement being based upon the landowner’s superior knowledge of conditions known to him, but not to the invitee. Inherent in that requirement is the ability of the invitee to appreciate the danger; however, the landowner is not an insurer of an invitee’s safety. In this case, the fact that the [appellee’s] employee was in the process of removing the spill and was observed by the invitee while doing so, demonstrates due diligence and at a minimum the exercise of ordinary care by the [appellee].” (Emphasis supplied.)
The pertinent deposition testimony of the child, Brandon Hob-son, taken when he was age seven-and-a-half, is as follows: “A. [Brandon Hobson] Well, it was up there by the dairy thing where the sodas and stuff were, and this broken glass or broken bottle of Sprite, I didn’t notice it on the floor; and when I was walking up there with my sandals and karate suit on, I just slipped over. . . . Q. [Appellee’s Counsel] You said it was a Sprite? Do you remember what the liquid was? A. It was Sprite. Q. It was a broken bottle? A. Yes. Q. Did you see the broken bottle? A. (Witness nods negatively). Q. Had you been running around the aisle? A. No. I was walking and then I slipped over. Q. Did you notice anybody in the aisle? . . . A. Yes. Q. Who did you see? A. I thought I saw someone was sweeping — getting it up with a mop. Q. So you saw somebody cleaning up the spill with a mop? A. Yes. And I was trying to look at this thing over there but — something over there, and then I said one little peep won’t hurt because I won’t go too far, so I walked up there and then on accident, I slipped. Q. What were you looking at when you slipped? A. I was looking at one of those Coca-Cola bottles, the back of it. Q. You weren’t looking on the floor? A. No. Q. Prior to your falling, had you seen anything on the floor? ... A. Well, I saw some Sprite. I said one little peep wouldn’t hurt. . . . Q. Before you fell, did you see anything on the floor? A. Actually, I did. Q. What did you see? A. I saw some liquid and a broken bottle. Q. Do you know that liquid can be slippery? A. Yes. Q. And then you walked into the liquid? A. And then I tripped over and fell on my back and then I was cut. Actually, I can’t remember. . . . (Emphasis supplied.) Held:
Examining the deposition testimony of Brandon Hobson, we conclude that his uncontroverted testimony, together with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, reveals that the then five-and-three quarter-year-old child saw spilled Sprite and a broken Sprite bottle in the aisle, he observed a lady mopping the substance, immediately thereafter his attention diverted from the spill and focused on a nearby Coca-Cola bottle being displayed for sale, and he believed it would be okay to take a “peep” at it, because he was not going to be going that far. As he moved toward the Coca-Cola bottle, he was not *419 looking at the floor; he then slipped in the spilled beverage falling upon the broken glass.
OCGA § 51-3-1 provides that “[w]here an owner or occupier of land, by express or implied invitation, induces or leads others to come upon his premises for any lawful purpose, he is liable in damages to such persons for injuries caused by his failure to exercise ordinary care in keeping the premises and approaches safe.” In
Augusta Amusements v. Powell,
Judgment affirmed.
