The plaintiffs-appellants, Evon and Phillip McGuire, appeal from the summary judgment granted by the trial court in favor of the defendants-appellees, Sears, Roebuck & Company (“Sears”) and M.D. Construction, Inc. (“M.D.”), on their claims for personal injuries and loss of consortium. In their single assignment of error, the McGuires contend that genuine issues of material fact exist as to the liability of Sears, the store owner, and M.D., the general contractor, when Evon McGuire tripped and fell in the store on an elevated row of ceramic tile installed by M.D. The assignment of error is not well taken.
The facts of this case are generally not disputed. The McGuires entered the Sears store at the Northgate Mall to shop. After entering the store, Evon McGuire, while following her husband, tripped and fell at a point where the dress and jewelry sections intersected. Evon McGuire testified upon deposition that her attention was directed toward the merchandise when she fell. After she fell, she discovered that she had tripped over a raised seam of ceramic tile. Although Evon McGuire estimated the height of the tile at approximately two and one-half to three inches, Sears in its answer to interrogatories gave the height as one-quarter inch, while a Sears employee testified upon deposition that it was one- *497 quarter to one-half inch in height. The record contains a photocopy of three photographs taken of the tile, but it is impossible to gauge any accurate measurement from these.
Evon McGuire conceded that the elevation was in an area that was well lit; that there was contrasting color between the tile and the floor; that her husband, who was carrying a weed trimmer to be returned to the garden center, had walked over the same area moments before without incident; and that had she been looking, she would have noticed the elevation. The evidence further established that the Sears store was undergoing construction during the period in question, and that signs were posted on the doors advising customers of this. In the specific area that McGuire fell, however, the evidence is vague with respect to whether there were any additional measures taken to warn customers of the elevation. A Sears employee testified that there was “a type of cone” and caution tape in the “general area,” but he stated that he could not recall any particular safety measures taken in the specific area where the tile was located.
As a business invitee, Evon McGuire was owed a duty by Sears to maintain the store premises in a reasonably safe condition and to warn her of unreasonably dangerous latent conditions.
Paschal v. Rite Aid Pharmacy, Inc.
(1985),
Upon this record the evidence is inconclusive with respect to the height of the ceramic tile. As noted, Evon McGuire claimed the tile to be two and one-half to three inches in height, whereas Sears and its employee put the height at between one-quarter and one-half inch. The photographic evidence does not resolve this discrepancy, and it is not the province of this court, or the court below, to attempt to determine this factual issue on a motion for summary judgment. However, the failure of the evidence to concretely establish the height of the tile does not create a triable issue because, no matter whether it was above or below two inches in height, the defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
*498
If, as McGuire alleges, the height of the tile was two and one-half to three inches, in other words the size of a small step, it was incumbent upon her to avoid application of the
“open
and obvious” doctrine. While a pedestrian in a store “is not, as a matter of law, required to look constantly downward,”
Grossnickle v. Germantown
(1965),
Although Evon McGuire alleges that her attention was distracted away from the floor by the women’s clothing and jewelry departments adjacent to the walkway, we do not And this allegation sufficient to avoid the “open and obvious” doctrine. Concededly, this court in
Armentrout v. Associated Dry Goods Corp.
(Jan. 9,1991), Hamilton App. No. C-890784, unreported,
In the present case, Evon McGuire does not point to any particular display, or any particular aspect of the goods on display, that rendered the area of her fall unsafe. Rather, she testified only that she was “fascinated” by the women’s clothing and jewelry and that her attention was therefore diverted. Such an allegation is too broad to avoid application of the “open and obvious” doctrine.
Furthermore, if the height of the tile is assumed to be, as alleged by Sears and its employee, one-quarter to one-half inch, the trial court could properly conclude that the difference in elevation between floor and tile was trivial and therefore not actionable as a matter of law. As determined by the Ohio Supreme Court in
Helms v. Am. Legion, Inc.
(1966),
Recently, we traced the evolution of the law in this area in
McLain v. Equitable Life Assur. Co.
(Mar. 13, 1996), Hamilton App. No. C-950048, unreported,
As we noted in
McLain,
there is no precise definition of “attendant circumstances,” but they generally include “ ‘any distraction that would come to the attention of a pedestrian in the same circumstances and reduce[d] the degree of care an ordinary person would exercise at the time.’ ”
Id.,
quoting
France v. Parliament Park Townhomes
(Apr. 27, 1994), Montgomery App. 14264, unreported,
■ In the present case, the area in which Evon McGuire fell was well lit. Furthermore, Sears had alerted its customers that they might encounter construction by posting signs on the entrance doors. Additional measures in the form of cones and caution tape had been taken inside the store and in the general area where Evon McGuire fell, although not necessarily in the specific area. As noted, Phillip McGuire had walked over the same area without mishap moments before while carrying a weed trimmer. The McGuires have neither alleged nor *500 presented any evidence of other people tripping over the same seam of ceramic tile. The only colorable allegation of an “attendant circumstance” is Evon McGuire’s testimony that her attention was drawn toward the jewelry and clothing on display. However, as we previously observed, she failed to point to any particular display or any particular aspect of the goods on display which would distinguish the area in question from one regularly encountered in a retail setting. We hold, therefore, if the elevation is assumed to be only one-quarter to one-half inch, the McGuires failed to present sufficient evidence of other attendant circumstances to create a triable issue whether such a minor variation constituted a substantial as opposed to trivial defect.
Civ.R. 56(C) provides that the nonmoving party to a summary judgment is entitled to have the evidence and inferences therefrom construed most strongly in his favor.
Hounshell v. Am. States Ins. Co.
(1981),
In light of this record, particularly Evon McGuire’s own deposition, the trial court was entitled to conclude that Sears satisfied its burden for summary judgment pursuant to Civ.R. 56(C) as mandated in
Dresher v. Burt
(1996),
It is unnecessary to address at length M.D.’s arguments set forth in its brief since M.D. was, likewise, entitled to have its motion for summary judgment granted by the trial judge. As an independent contractor and not a store owner, M. D. cannot avail itself of the “open and obvious” doctrine
per se
and was required to warn Sears’s customers of any foreseeable risk of harm it created on the premises.
Simmers v. Bentley Constr. Co., supra,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
