Once again this court is called upon to decide if liability can be imposed upon a home owner by a visitor who sustains injuries from a fall resulting from a failure to observe the existence of a minor difference in floor levels. In this instance the appeal via certificate is by defendant home owner from denial of his motion for summary judgment.
As in all slip-and-fall cases the facts determine if the particular situation 1 comes within those controlling precedents which have ruled for plaintiff or defendant or held the question to be for determination by the jury.
Accordingly, we briefly detail the facts preceding plaintiffs fall. Plaintiffs husband and defendant were members of the same church bible class. On the day in question, at the invitation of defendant, class members and their families assembled at defendant’s domicile for a Christmas get-together at which refreshments were to be served and gifts to be exchanged. Arriving at defendant’s home at about 7:00 in the evening, plaintiff and her husband observed that defendant and his guests were in another part of the house. Neither plaintiff nor her husband had previously visited defendant’s home. As plaintiff, accompanied by her husband, entered the foyer, she noticed a Christmas tree on the far side of the living room to her right. Inasmuch as she had brought two Christmas gifts to the party, plaintiff decided to place them under the tree. But plaintiff was unaware of a step-down between the foyer and "sunken” living room, and as she stepped off the foyer plaintiff fell to the living room floor, suffering severe injuries.
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1. In cases of this type the appellant and appellee advocates argue initially the legal status of plaintiff. Because Judge Arthur G. Powell
2
expressed the applicable law so well in one of our court’s earliest decisions, his opinion in
Mandeville Mills v. Dale,
2. Pretermitting the question discussed by both parties of whether plaintiff was a licensee or an invitee, we conclude defendant has carried the burden of showing the absence of legal liability and the non-existence of a genuine issue of material fact. For, even if judged by the higher standard of care owed to an invitee, defendant cannot be said to have breached the obligation owed to plaintiff.
In
Wardlaw v. Executive Committee,
In the case at bar therefore the mere difference between the level of the foyer and that of the living room (approximately six to eight inches) does not ipso facto constitute negligence.
Executive Committee v. Wardlaw,
Nor do other facts appear which would render the defendant liable. The record reflects that the immediate surroundings were adequately lighted. Compare
Tybee Amusement Co. v. Odum,
Moreover, defendant was under no duty to warn plaintiff of the step-down. "Warnings of a condition which are or should be obvious are not required.”
Herschel McDaniel Funeral Home v. Hines,
In sum, "No negligence on the part of the defendant, either in the construction or in the maintenance of the floor or of the carpet appears, and plaintiff is not entitled to recover. Her misfortune flows from an accident, for which nobody is at fault and for which nobody can be
held.” Herschel McDaniel Funeral Home v. Hines,
For similar holdings on summary judgments, see
Beaubien v. Bogle,
3. Plaintiff contends the trial court properly denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment since it is questionable as to whether defendant knew that another
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person had stumbled previously upon the step-down. We disagree. "The fact that someone had previously fallen on the steps would not create a negligent condition where none had existed before.”
Sanford v. Howe,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
"[E]ach case virtually must stand or fall upon its own peculiar facts, and any attempt to draw fine distinctions based on supposed factual differences must almost inevitably fail. In the final analysis, therefore, resort must be had to fundamental principles. . .”
Rockmart Bank v. Hall,
Lawyers outside Georgia have now discovered the greatness of our Powell and the legendary Logan Bleckley: "Powell is always interesting, and Bleckley is a real find.” So says a book reviewer in 61 Am. Bar Assn. Jour. 804 (July 1975).
