Coleman sued Long John Silver’s for personal injuries she sustained when she tripped and fell outside its restaurant. The trial court denied Long John Silver’s motion for summary judgment and issued a certificate of immediate review, and we granted Long John
Coleman wrenched her knee when the heel of her shoe caught in a small hole or crack in the concrete ramp in front of the restaurant. She was wearing pumps with a two-inch heel, and her foot came out of the shoe, which remained lodged in the hole. She described the hole as an inch or so in width and it was just large enough for her shoe heel to lodge inside it. Coleman’s two companions testified that after the incident the hole was visible from a standing position. Coleman testified she did not know whether the hole was visible from such a place but that as she approached she was not looking where she placed her feet.
This case is factually similar to Piggly Wiggly Southern v. Bennett,
Coleman argues Bennett does not apply because a factual dispute remains as to whether her view of the pavement was blocked by one of her companions walking just ahead of her. If such did cause an obstruction to her view, that obstruction is not attributable to Long John Silver’s. See Froman v. George L. Smith, Ga. World Congress Auth.,
She also argues Bennett does not control because a sign in the window of the restaurant posed a distraction that removed her attention from where she was walking. See Redding v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
Coleman argues that Barentine v. Kroger Co.,
Judgment reversed.
