Plaintiff Lindsey sued defendant J. H. Harvey Company to recover for personal injuries she sustained on defendant’s business premises, alleging that she “suddenly and without warning, fell backwards violently to the floor in a pool of water that had collected from the employee’s moping [sic] the floor.” Defendant denied the material allegations of the complaint and moved for summary judgment. Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the non-movant, the record shows the following undisputed facts:
On September 13, 1990, plaintiff and her ex-husband entered defendant’s supermarket at 9:15 p.m. They progressed up and down the aisles. At the third aisle, plaintiff noticed that two store employees were mopping the floor, leaving “[a] bunch of water.” Plaintiff, who was wearing “flip-flops,” continued her shopping and reached the fifth aisle. She then returned to the third aisle. As she retraced her steps, plaintiff’s ex-husband warned her to “watch out for the water” because the floor was wet in that aisle. When she rounded the corner to the third aisle, plaintiff slipped and fell in water accumulated on the floor from the mopping. According to Robert A. Mulkey, the assistant manager, the cleaning procedures were to wet mop the floor with plain water and to let the floors dry by air. No warning signs had been placed in the aisles. In response to defendant’s motion, plaintiff submitted her affidavit, deposing that, at the time she rounded the aisle where she slipped, her eyes were focused on the shelves looking for the spices she was about to select.
The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment and this appeal followed. Held:
Plaintiff enumerates the grant of summary judgment, contending that genuine issues of material fact remain. Specifically, plaintiff argues that a jury should determine defendant’s tort liability to her because defendant never warned her about the water on the floor and because it is a jury question whether she exercised ordinary care for *660 her own safety.
“The slip and fall cases involving foreign substances are inapplicable in an instance where the plaintiff alleges that [s]he fell because of the slippery wax, oil, or other finish that defendant [has] placed on the floor. Because the defendant applied or authorized the application of the floor treatment, he is presumed to have knowledge of its existence. See
American National Bank v.
Howard, 117 Ga. [App.] 834 (
In the case sub judice, plaintiff admitted that she had actual knowledge of the wet condition of the floor, specifically in aisle three, before she returned to that area of the store. Consequently, the failure of defendant to warn her does not show the existence of any jury question as to defendant’s liability.
Rogers v. Atlanta Enterprises,
89
*661
Ga. App. 903, 906, supra. Nor is there a jury question as to whether plaintiff exercised ordinary care for her own safety. In light of the warning from her ex-husband to “watch out for the water,” plaintiff must be deemed to have acted on her actual knowledge and to have assumed the obvious risks in traversing the wet floor.
Rogers v. Atlanta Enterprises,
Judgment affirmed.
