This is an appeal by a plaintiff customer from grant of summary judgment to defendant retailer in a *150 slip-and-fall case.
Plaintiffs version as contained in her answers to interrogatories is that her fall was caused by the presence on the floor of "a plastic coat hanger of the type stores mostly use.” We quote her words: "I started down one aisle of the store only to find about half-way down that aisle was blocked by boxes being unpacked by two clerks who were talking at the time. They made no move to clear the aisle so I retraced my steps to go down the next aisle parallel to that one. I was aggravated at the inconvenience and walking quite briskly as I turned the corner at the end of that aisle. As I rounded the end of the counter I stepped on something which threw me down...” Other pertinent answers were: "After the fellow shopper asked for a chair for me, it was placed next to the store employee who, incidentally could have seen the hanger on the floor... [The manager] called the two clerks who were stocking the counters in the aisle I first attempted to use, asked them why the coat hanger was on the floor. One of them replied that probably some customer threw it down there. . .”
Upon defendant moving for a summary judgment in reliance upon the foregoing quotations from plaintiffs answers the plaintiffs response was that "in this case all questions of negligence, proximate cause, etc., are questions to be passed upon by a jury. That the defendant has not shown that none of its many employees were negligent in the premises considered.”
1. "As in all slip-and-fall cases the facts determine if the particular situation comes within those controlling precedents which have ruled for plaintiff or defendant or held the question to be for determination by the jury.”
Lamberson v. Norris,
2. As was said in
Food Fair, Inc. v. Mock,
Other recent decisions containing numerous precedents in slip-and-fall cases holding similarly against the plaintiff customer
are Hammonds v. Jackson,
3. Plaintiff can derive no help from her assertion that a store employee "could have seen the hanger on the floor” as this is merely a conclusion as to what other persons did which is without probative value. See
Matthews v. Wilson,
4. "The customer must exercise ordinary care for his own safety, and must by the same degree of care avoid the effect of the merchant’s negligence after it becomes apparent to him or in the exercise of ordinary care he should have learned of it. He must make use of all his senses in a reasonable measure amounting to ordinary care in discovering and avoiding those things that might cause hurt to him.”
King Hardware Co. v. Teplis,
Judgment affirmed.
