Plaintiff as a customer in defendant’s grocery store sustained personal injuries when he tripped against a free standing wrought iron cookie display rack placed in the aisle of defendant’s grocery store. Defendant appeals a judgment in favor of plaintiff in accord with jury verdict awarding damages and assessing 100% of fault to defendant.
For two related reasons defendant contends that plaintiff failed to make a sub-missible case. It first argues that the cookie rack as positioned in the aisle did not constitute a dangerous condition and, second, it contends that the condition was open and obvious. Defendant concludes on the authority of Restatement of Torts § 343 as adopted by the Missouri Supreme Court in Dixon v. General Grocery Co.,
The applicable law was succintly stated in Dixon:
“a possessor of land is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to business visitors by a natural or artificial condition thereon if, but only if, he (a) knows, or by the exercise of reasonable care could discover, the condition which, if known to him, he should realize as involving an unreasonable risk to them, and (b) has no reason to believe that they will discover the condition or realize the risk involved therein, and (c) invites or permits them to enter or remain upon the land without exercising reasonable care (1) to make the condition reasonably safe, or (2) to give a warning adequate to enable them to avoid the harm..”
Dixon v. General Grocery Co.,
With these legal principles in mind we view the operative facts from a perspective most favorable to the verdict. Grube v. Associated Dry Goods, Inc.,
Defendant’s store manager testified that a person walking down the west wall and observing the dairy products and frozen cakes would not be able to see the cookie rack; that a person observing the cake display would have the cookie rack to his left and would not be facing it as he proceeded southwardly along that display; that he could thereby move behind the cookie rack while selecting a frozen cake. Plaintiff testified that that is the manner in which he approached the area of “danger”. Plaintiff testified, “.. I didn’t see the cake I wanted so I turned to leave and that’s when somebody .. the cake rack was there.” He encountered the cookie rack as he began to turn to his right and take a step. He just turned to leave and had not even taken a step when he fell over the cookie rack. He did not walk into the display rack. While observing the frozen cakes the rack was to his back and a protrusion for another wall display blocked his path southwardly or to his left. He turned back to the north began a first step and tripped over the cookie rack which was behind him. He had not seen the cookie rack before he fell over it because he was looking at the cakes in front of him along the eight foot display. As a result of the fall he sustained injuries to his legs and lower back.
In defense of this appeal plaintiff agrees the cookie rack in itself was not inherently dangerous. He argues that the placement of the cookie rack in the public passageway together with plaintiff’s motives for so placing the rack created a dangerous situation which was known or knowable to the defendant and which plaintiff had no reason to discover because defendant intended to distract plaintiff and did distract plaintiff by the decorated cake display. Plaintiff accuses defendant of creating a pathway behind the cookie rack which was the only means by which a customer was able to obtain frozen cakes. Under these circumstances plaintiff argues defendant assumed a duty of reasonable care to make the store safe or warn plaintiff as a customer and for the same reason the existence of the cookie rack at the location was not an open and obvious condition. It constituted a pitfall created by the defendant for its own commercial reasons. Defendant store manager acknowledged that the cookie rack was so positioned because defendant wanted customers to go behind the cookie rack; that it could have been placed flush up against a wall, but that would have prevented customer access to the cakes. The location of the cookie rack was determined for reasons of “merchandising” the cookies.
We find plaintiff made a submissible case. For its own purposes defendant had reason to expect that plaintiff’s attention would be distracted by the cake display. A combination of the cake display and the location of the cookie rack created a danger. The rack was neither open nor obvi
Defendant’s reliance on Grube v. Associated Dry Goods, Inc.,
On the facts the existence and location of the cookie rack was not open and obvious to a customer such as the plaintiff who was searching for a frozen cake. Defendant’s store manager acknowledged this fact. Accordingly, the cases relied upon by defendant asserting the general rule that an invitor is not liable for conditions which are open and obvious are inapplicable. The cookie rack was open and obvious only if a customer was walking down the aisle toward the cookie rack where he would be bound as a matter of ordinary care to see what was open and obvious. This does not apply where the conduct of the defendant invites plaintiff not to look and defendant, in the exercise of ordinary care could have foreseen the consequences. In the present case there is no evidence plaintiff had actual or constructive knowledge of the presence of the cookie rack until after he fell. We recall that plaintiff’s attention was distracted by the frozen cake display as defendant intended. The passageway between the cookie rack and the frozen cake display created a dangerous condition not known to the plaintiff.
On the question of submissibility plaintiff has cited this court to Walton v. Greenberg Mercantile Corporation,
In support of its argument for a new trial defendant alleges that the verdict was excessive and on that account a new trial should be granted. This is not exactly the issue that was presented to the trial court in defendant’s motion for new trial where defendant argued that the verdict was grossly excessive. On our review of the evidence we find no abuse of discretion in denial of a new trial on this ground. Goodloe v. Pink,
Defendant also contends that the court erred in not granting a new trial because the jurors returned a verdict for plaintiff and found the defendant 100% at fault. Again, our review of the facts indicated that there was evidence from which the jury could conclude that defendant was 100% at fault. In our view defendant for its own purposes invited the plaintiff to perform those acts as a customer which plaintiff performed. In so doing plaintiff tripped and fell over a display rack at a time when he did not know of the danger. Because defendant was looking forward and into the frozen cake display it is of no consequence that he was not paying attention to the location of the cake rack to his left and rear. Defendant has connected this claim of error with claims of error in overruling objections to closing argument of plaintiff which are considered hereafter. In itself we find no error in refusing to grant a new trial solely on the finding that the jury found defendant 100% at fault where the evidence supported the finding.
As a matter of plain error defendant claims that the following argument justifies a new trial. In plaintiff’s final closing argument plaintiff told the jury:
The decision you make, if you say that National is wrong, maybe, just maybe, they will get the message that his cookie rack shouldn’t be there; that they’re ere-*223 ating a dangerous condition and maybe, maybe they will move it because they’re not going to otherwise. Now, one last point here. Nobody has really talked to this up to this point. Defendant’s taking the position it’s Jesse Jones’ fault I’ve taken the position it’s their fault. Well, you’re being instructed and I talked to you about the concept of comparative negligence. You will consider that when you get back there. Now, ladies and gentlemen, I would suggest to you that if you made up your mind at this point one way to the other, you stick to your guns. Comparative negligence is basically a compromised position. If that’s an alternative, fine. It’s there. Consider it. But, it’s my position that the only way you’re going to tell National that this cookie rack is creating a dangerous condition is you’ve got to give them a message that tells them it ought to be moved or removed or placed in a different position.
We do not approve the proposition that a determination of comparative negligence is in any sense a compromise. It is a determination of fact comparing the degree of causation flowing from negligent acts of the defendant, if any, to the negligent acts of plaintiff, if any. For several reasons we reject this claim of error. First, the jury found defendants to be 100% at fault which indicated that no “compromise” was required. Second, the instructions submitted to the jury were in the form provided by MAI. Third, the claim of error is not one which, on the present facts, demonstrates a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice. Rule 84.13(c).
Defendant’s last contention of error offered to support its right to a new trial occurred when the court overruled defendant’s objections to part of plaintiff’s closing argument. The first incident occurred when plaintiff argued the following, “Now additionally, we go to the next point, plaintiff did not know and by using ordinary care could not have known of this condition. You’ve heard the testimony of Jesse. He said he never saw the rack at all. Okay. Well, could he have known or should he have known? Well, you have to judge the standard by the care of an ordinary person. You’re not judging Jesse Jones as though he was an A student. An ordinary person is a C student.” The objection was “.. it’s up to the jurors to be guided by the definition and for them to decided what an ordinary person is.” The reference in the objection was to instruction No. 7, based on MAI 11.05 which read, “The phrase ‘ordinary care’ as used in these instructions means that degree of care that an ordinarily careful and prudent person would use under the same or similar circumstances.”
Defendant contends that plaintiff’s argument presented a false standard by which the jury would interpret MAI 11.05. Further, defendant argues that the statements constituted an argument on a matter of law and relies on Busch & Latta Painting Corporation v. State Highway Commission,
Plaintiff’s counsel also made an argument which suggested to the jury that a small child or an elderly person in poor health could have sustained an injury in defendant’s store from a fall similar to plaintiff’s fall. Defendant objected to these statements as being improper, beyond the evidence and irrelevant to the lawsuit. This argument was made in the
We affirm.
