The plaintiff alleged that the customer aisle she was using and which was formed by wall shelves on one side and stack shelves and display counters on the other was six feet in width but that the placement of the large and small display baskets and the various sized boxes and containers in the aisle closed the aisle to foot passage. A merchant has the right to place display baskets in the aisles of his store and he may place cartons and containers in the aisles while he places articles on the display shelves, and a customer may expect to find such objects in the aisles; nevertheless, the merchant must so place such articles so as not to> threaten danger to those using the aisle and so that they are in full sight and within the observation of everyone.
Tinley
v.
F. W. Woolworth Co.,
70
Ga. App.
390 (
Special demurrer No. 7 attacks paragraph 12 of the amended petition on the ground that the allegation was meaningless, surplusage and failed to illustrate any issue in the case. Paragraph 12 alleged that the merchandise on the store shelves was so displayed as to engage the attention and interest of the customers. The plaintiff does not allege that at the time she fell her attention was partially diverted to such attractively displayed merchandise and does not allege that such display contributed to her fall. Since the plaintiff does not tie in the allegations of paragraph 12 with her falling, the defendant’s special demurrer was good and the court erred in overruling it.
That portion of special demurrer 10 which attacks the allegations of paragraph 20 of the petition that “one or more” of the “handy baskets” were placed between the display baskets and extended out into the customer aisle “as much as four feet” is meritorious. The defendant is entitled to know the approximate number of “handy baskets” that were placed between the display baskets and how far such “handy baskets” extended out into the customer aisle or is entitled to more detailed allegations concerning the number of baskets and how they were placed so as to partially close the customer aisle.
The court erred in overruling special demurrers Nos. 7 and 10. The court did not err in overruling the general demurrer and the other special demurrers.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
