Helen O. KOLOSKY and Kenneth J. Kolosky, Her Husband, Appellants,
v.
WINN DIXIE STORES, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*892 John J. Pine of Fetterman & Associates, North Palm Beach, for appellants.
Janet R. DeLaura of Smalbein, Eubank, Johnson, Rosier & Bussey, P.A., Rockledge, for appellee.
HERSEY, Chief Judge.
Helen and Kenneth Kolosky, plaintiffs below, appeal the trial court's final judgment directing a verdict in favor of Winn Dixie Stores, Inc. We reverse.
The Koloskys sued Winn Dixie, alleging negligence in failing to maintain its premises in a safe condition specifically, in permitting three children to run unrestrained through the store resulting in injury to Mrs. Kolosky. The complaint included a derivative claim by Mr. Kolosky.
The case was tried before a jury. Mrs. Kolosky testified that on December 4, 1980, she and her husband went shopping in a Winn Dixie store in Okeechobee, Florida. They were in the store thirty to forty-five minutes. When the Koloskys first entered the store, a woman carrying a baby and accompanied by three little boys (whom Mrs. Kolosky estimated were all under the age of six) entered just ahead of them. On several occasions over the course of the next half hour or more, she observed the three boys running through the store playing tag. She also saw a number of Winn Dixie employees stocking shelves in various aisles. This testimony was corroborated by Mr. Kolosky.
As the couple waited in the checkout line, Mrs. Kolosky realized she had forgotten to get coffee, proceeded to the coffee aisle, and started back to the checkout line. As she reached the end of the aisle, the three boys ran around the corner and knocked her down.
The store manager, James Addison, testified that there were six employees stocking the ten aisles of the store on the day in question. They all denied having observed the children running in the store.
The jury awarded $80,000 to Mrs. Kolosky and $20,000 to Mr. Kolosky, to be reduced fifty percent because of Mrs. Kolosky's own negligence. Winn Dixie renewed its motion for directed verdict on which the trial judge had previously reserved ruling. The trial court in its final judgment granted Winn Dixie's motion, finding in pertinent part, as follows:
(1) The injury sustained by Plaintiff was not the proximate cause of the purported negligent act of Defendant, and at most any such act amounted only to a remote cause of said injury; and further as to Plaintiff's injury, there is an independent *893 intervening cause not foreseeable and the probable consequence of any wrongful actions of the Defendant. See Cone v. Inter County Telephone and Telegraph Company,40 So.2d 148 (Fla. 1949); Guice v. Enfinger,389 So.2d 270 (Fla. D.C.A. 1 1980); Fellows v. Citizens Federal Savings and Loan,383 So.2d 1140 (Fla. D.C.A. 4 1980).
Where "the issue on appeal is the propriety of granting a directed verdict, [the appellate court] must view the evidence and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the [non-moving parties] and all conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in their favor." Burmeister v. American Motorists Insurance Co.,
The proprietor of a business owes a duty to invitees to protect them from reasonably foreseeable risks. "Foreseeability may be established ... by proving that the proprietor had actual or constructive knowledge of a dangerous condition on his premises that was likely to cause harm to a patron." Hall v. Billy Jack's, Inc.,
In Winn Dixie Stores, Inc. v. Williams,
In the instant case, evidence was adduced that the three children were observed running unsupervised through the store aisles several times over the course of approximately thirty to forty-five minutes. Winn Dixie had six employees stocking shelves at the time, and the store manager was present as well. This is sufficient to support a finding of constructive notice of the dangerous condition and a reasonable opportunity to correct it.
Although no Florida cases directly on point have been located, appellants cite an Oklahoma case which is substantially on all fours. In Fleming v. Allied Supermarkets, Inc.,
The Court believes and finds from the evidence that for a period of from a minimum of 11 minutes to a maximum of 30 minutes a small five-year-old child was pushing a grocery cart with a two-year-old child in the basket and was running or trotting with the same through the aisles and passageways of the defendant's store; that this amounted to a dangerous condition in the store to the safety of the customers of the defendant; that this dangerous condition was actually known to and observed by employees of the defendant prior to the accident herein, but if not known, existed over such a period of time in plain view that in the exercise of ordinary care the same should have been known and eliminated by the defendant; that the defendant did nothing to eliminate this dangerous condition after both actual and constructive notice thereof but permitted it to exist and did nothing to warn the plaintiffs of such dangerous condition existing in the aisles and passageways of its store; that as a result the plaintiffs were damaged because of such dangerous condition.
Id. at 308-309. The court recognized that the store was not an insurer of the safety of its customers, but noted that it did have a duty to "exercise ordinary care to keep the aisles and passageways in its store ... in a reasonably safe condition ... ." and this includes eliminating dangerous conditions "of which the storekeeper had actual or constructive notice." Id. at 309.
See also Bragg v. Warwick Shoppers World, Inc.,
Appellee cites a number of cases in which a store or other business was found not to be liable for injuries inflicted on one patron or customer by another. These cases are distinguishable because each involves a sudden, unexpected action by the tortfeasor where there was no prior indication that the tortfeasor was engaging in the type of conduct which caused the injury. Under such circumstances the business does not have actual or constructive knowledge of the existence of a dangerous condition, nor does it have any opportunity to correct it. See Heps v. Burdine's, Inc.,
Prior to the adoption in Florida of the doctrine of comparative negligence, a plaintiff was barred from recovery where the dangerous condition was obvious or actually known to the plaintiff. See Earley v. Morrison Cafeteria Co. of Orlando,
The fallacy is in the premise that the discharge of the occupier's duty to warn by the plaintiff's actual knowledge necessarily discharges the duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition by correcting dangers of which the occupier has actual or constructive knowledge. To extend the obvious danger doctrine to bar a plaintiff from recovery by negating a landowner's or occupier's duty to invitees to maintain his premises in a reasonably safe condition would be inconsistent with the philosophy of Hoffman v. Jones,280 So.2d 431 *895 (Fla. 1973), that liability should be apportioned according to fault.
Id. at 1193-94 (footnotes omitted).
The rule now is that:
a "business invitee," who is injured by a hazardous condition existing on land owned by another is no longer barred from recovery because of his equal or even superior knowledge of the hazard, where the landowner knew or should have known of the condition and failed to keep the premises in good repair.
Ferber v. Orange Blossom Center, Inc.,
As noted above, the trial court found defendant's negligence to be only a "remote cause" of plaintiff's injury and that there existed an unforeseeable independent intervening cause (presumably the actions of the children). We respectfully disagree with the trial court's reasoning.
As this court pointed out in Crislip v. Holland,
An action for negligence is predicated upon the existence of a legal duty owed by the defendant to protect the plaintiff from an unreasonable risk of harm. The extent of the defendant's duty is circumscribed by the scope of the anticipated risks to which the defendant exposes others. In order to prevail in a lawsuit, the plaintiff must demonstrate that he is within the zone of risks that are reasonably foreseeable by the defendant. The liability of the tortfeasor does not depend upon whether his negligent acts were the direct cause of the plaintiff's injuries, as long as the injuries incurred were the reasonably foreseeable consequences of the tortfeasor's conduct. Concord Florida, Inc. v. Lewin,341 So.2d 242 (Fla. 3rd DCA 1976).
In Stevens v. Jefferson,
In the instant case it is unnecessary to apply the extension of the rule since the facts fit squarely within the ambit of the rule itself. It is undisputed that Winn Dixie had a duty to its customers to maintain its store premises in a reasonably safe condition. A dangerous condition was created by the activities of the three boys of which the store should have been aware. Under Stevens, this is a sufficient showing that the risk of harm was foreseeable.
Further, although it is not necessary that the specific type of injury which occurred be foreseeable, but just that some injury would occur, in the instant case exactly that type of injury which is foreseeable from children running unrestrained through a store did in fact occur: they ran into a customer and knocked her down.
We distinguish the cases cited by the trial court in support of its final judgment. In Cone v. Inter County Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
In Guice v. Enfinger,
In the final case cited by the trial court, Fellows v. Citizens Federal Savings & Loan Association of St. Lucie County,
We reverse the final judgment of the trial court and remand for entry of judgment in accordance with the jury verdict.
ANSTEAD and DELL, JJ., concur.
