Plaintiff brought this action to recover for personal injuries resulting from a fall in defendant’s grocery store. The cause was tried before a jury which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Defendant appeals from the judgment and it is defendant’s theory on this appeal that the evidence is insufficient, as a matter of law, to establish any negligence on its part; that the court erred in denying defendant’s motions and in its instructions to the jury.
Defendant corporation operates a grocery store of the supermarket type in the Stonestown shopping center near San Francisco. Plaintiff, a 64-year-old widow, accompanied by her daughter-in-law, grandchild and another adult, entered defendant’s market at about 4 p. m. on Thursday, March 12, 1953. Before that time she and her companions had been shopping for about two hours. They shopped in the meat and grocery departments of defendant’s store for about 20-30 minutes. Defendant concedes that they did not go near the vegetable department which was located on the north side of the store. As the group arrived at defendant’s eheckstand number 5, plaintiff’s daughter-in-law remembered that she needed butter and asked the plaintiff to go back and get some. Plaintiff’s companions paid for the other purchases and moved on.
The plaintiff went back for the butter and then after a few minutes returned to the same eheckstand and waited in line. She paid for the butter and, after having it packaged by the clerk, she moved to the end of the counter, the last part of which extended to the terrazzo corridor. As the plaintiff took *352 her first step on the terrazzo corridor, she fell. Although there is some conflicting evidence, that most favorable to the plaintiff, which we are required to accept, is to the effect that she stepped on a piece of lettuce which caused her left foot to slip. Immediately after falling, plaintiff saw a piece of lettuce about the size of a half dollar protruding beyond the side of her left shoe. One of defendant’s employees removed a portion of this lettuce but some remained on her shoe and was seen by the nurse at the hospital who subsequently removed the shoe. Residuals of this greenery were still on the shoe at the time of the trial. Shortly after the fall, the police officer, who was subsequently called in, saw a fresh piece of lettuce about the size of his hand about three feet from where plaintiff lay and observed one of defendant’s employees pick it up from the aisle. One of plaintiff’s companions also saw a few pieces of vegetable matter on the floor near plaintiff’s feet. Defendant’s employees testified that they did not see any lettuce on the floor and denied removing any lettuce from plaintiff’s shoe.
On the above evidence, defendant contends that, as a matter of law, the evidence fails to sustain the jury’s implied finding that it was responsible for the vegetable matter on the floor or that it had either actual or constructive notice of its presence there. Defendant also raises certain errors in. the instructions of the trial court. We think that the record amply supports the verdict.
In
Hatfield
v.
Levy Brothers,
As to the first issue, it is conceded that here the plaintiff was a business invitee and to whom the defendant owed a duty to exercise reasonable care in keeping the premises safe.
(Oldenburg
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
The record reyeals that defendant’s market is one of several businesses occupying a common building and served with a common terrazzo corridor. Defendant is the only tenant of the building who sells vegetables. While all of the tenants participated in the cleaning of the corridor, defendant had assumed the duty of removing vegetable and other matter which fell thereon from the checkstands, a portion of which extended to the corridor.
Before entering defendant’s market plaintiff and her companions had not been in the other area where vegetables were sold. They did not enter defendant’s vegetable department. Plaintiff went through defendant’s usual checking-out procedure which is as follows: the customer places his purchases on the revolving package platform extending beyond the entrance to the cheekstand; the customer has nothing further to do with the handling of his purchases until the attendant has completely packaged them and handed them to the customer at the far end of the cheekstand.
On the date in question, defendant carried five or more types of lettuce, of which only the Los Angeles head lettuce *354 was sold in a sealed cellophane bag. The other kinds of lettuce were sold in bulk tied with a flexible wire band. There was some evidence that the piece of vegetable matter found on plaintiff’s shoe may have been of the Los Angeles type. The packaging and handling of the lettuce was done in defendant’s basement. It was the custom of defendant’s check-stand operators to remove the material that didn’t look good or edible from lettuce and cabbage, if requested, and to remove greens at the bag rack at the far end of the checkout counter. For these defendant provided garbage receptacles under the cheekstand. About five minutes before the accident, the attendant at cheekstand number 5 removed lettuce or cabbage leaves from merchandise she was ringing up on the cash register.
Defendant knew that greens handled by its employees at the cheekstand would fall from the counter to the floor, and therefore instructed its checkers that spilled greens were to be cleaned immediately after they fell and to inspect and sweep customers’ aisles and the common corridor whenever necessary. Brooms and dustpans for this purpose were located between checkstands numbers 5 and 6. Defendant’s janitor was employed only until 12 noon. After the janitor left, it was the duty of the checkers and baggers to sweep if they had the time.
Defendant’s manager had no personal knowledge whether the area in question had been swept in the three hours preceding the fall but had inspected the area about 15 minutes before the accident and had seen no lettuce leaves. Defendant’s assistant manager had been delegated the duty of seeing that the corridors and aisle walk by the checkstands were clean but had not inspected the area in question for several hours before the fall. One of defendant’s checkers, Mr. Yonikian, testified that he had swept the general area of the corridor about five or ten minutes before the accident but stated that he did not sweep or inspect the customers’ aisle in question. Two of the checkers at the adjoining check-stands denied that anyone had swept the area within the period Mr. Yonikian claimed to have been sweeping.
Mrs. Weidman, the checker at stand number 5, testified that she knew that foreign material “that might be injurious to people walking by the cheekstand required sweeping” and that she swept the aisle to remove such hazards from the floor. She denied that anyone other than herself had swept in her area within one to two hours before the accident. She further *355 testified that she swept some greens from the floor in the general area of the checkstand about five minutes before the accident but not the aisle where customers were required to walk or the terrazzo area. Mrs. Weidman stated that she had inspected the aisleway a few minutes before the fall and found nothing to sweep up but later testified that there were pieces of greens in the aisle. Mr. Miramonte, who was “bagging” groceries at checkstand number 5 at the time of the accident, testified that 4 p. m. on the day in question had been such a busy time that the checkstand had been constantly busy for at least 20 to 30 minutes before the accident so that Mrs. Weidman had not had'time to sweep within the 15 or 20 minutes before the accident.
The quantum of care which the law exacts is a question relative to the facts of each case.
(Tuttle
v. Crawford,
We think this ease is similar to Tuttle v. Crawford, supra, 8 Cal.2d 126, where the defendants carried wet lettuce across the floor. After the plaintiff fell, she had vegetable particles and water stains on her clothing. The court’s statement at 131 is especially pertinent here: “But even if there were one or two lettuce leaves or portions of leaves on the floor, it does not follow that respondent was negligent in failing to see them. On this issue appellants’ employee testified that he had swept the water from the space which had been made wet five or eight minutes before the accident occurred. If he swept, *356 he swept poorly, as the respondent’s right stocking and dress bore evidence as to vegetable particles adhering to them.”
In
Ahern
v.
S. H. Kress & Co.,
As to the question of the proximate cause of plaintiff’s fall, in
Goldsmith
v.
Mills,
As to the second issue, defendant contends that the plaintiff failed to prove its actual or constructive knowledge of the hazardous condition. In
Louie
v.
Hagstrom’s Food Stores,
The cases cited by the defendant do not help its position. In
Gold
v.
Arizona Realty etc. Co.,
Our view here is also supported by
Hale
v.
Safeway Stores, Inc.,
Nor is there any merit in defendant's contention that the instruction based on
Hatfield
v.
Levy Bros., supra,
“In applying the rules of law that have been and will be stated by the Court to the facts of this case, and in judging the conduct of the parties, you may consider the fact that the attention of persons who visit public stores ordinarily is attracted by the display of wares offered for sale and may be more or less absorbed by the transactions which they have in mind. You may consider whether the defendant anticipated that fact with ordinary care in the exercise of the duty heretofore mentioned; also whether the plaintiff did or did not share that ordinary experience of store visitors, and if so, what effect that fact had on her conduct in relation to the cause of the accident, if any.” In
Tuttle
v.
Crawford, supra,
Defendant further maintains that the court erred in refusing its proposed instruction number 8 which dealt solely with the terrazzo corridor and made no reference to the customers’ aisle. Instructions numbers 23, 24 and 25 cover this matter adequately. Furthermore, the record revealed that defendant along with other tenants had the duty of keeping the terrazzo corridor clear and that defendant did actually sweep it.
There is also no merit in defendant’s final argument that the refusal to instruct on unavoidable accident was prejudicial.
(Slovick
v.
James I. Barnes Constr. Co.,
In view of the foregoing the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Dooling, J., and Draper, J., concurred.
