The appellant urgently contends that she was an invitee of the defendant and not a licensee at the time of her injury in his home. The authorities, however, support the view that she was a bare licensee.
Pafford v. Construction Co.,
The appellant further contends, however, if it be conceded that a guest or visitor in a home is only a bare licensee, that since she was engaged in a mission for the benefit of the defendant’s wife, at the time of her injury, her status was changed to that of an invitee, citing
Thompson v. DeVonde,
It is said in Anno.:
Minor services performed by a guest for the host during the course of a visit will not change the status of the guest from a licensee to an invitee. Anno.:
In our opinion, the evidence adduced in the trial below bearing on the question of negligence was insufficient to justify its submission to the jury, even if the plaintiff had been an invitee.
Ashley v. Jones,
The fact that a floor is waxed does not constitute evidence of negligence. Nor does the mere fact that one slips and falls on a floor constitute evidence of negligence.
Bes ipsa loquitur
does not apply to injuries resulting from slipping and falling on a waxed or oiled floor.
Barnes v. Hotel Corp.,
There is no evidence on this record tending to show that the defendant applied the wax to the floor in an improper manner or that an improper material was used.
It seems to be the general rule that an action will'not be sustained against the owner or lessee of a building, founded solely upon the fact that the patron or invitee was injured by slipping on a waxed or oiled floor, where the floor had been waxed or polished in the usual and customary manner and with material in general use for that purpose. Barnes v. Hotel Corp., supra.
In Brown v. Davenport Holding Co., supra, the Court said: “The common use of waxed and polished floors, covered with small rugs, in homes and apartments is a matter of common knowledge. In the instant case the evidence establishes that the appellant knew of such use. They are not inherently dangerous to invitees. In the absence of unusual circumstances and conditions, the maintenance of polished hardwood floors and the use of small rugs in an apartment is not negligence for which the owner is liable to a prospective tenant invited to inspect the premises . . . though a polished floor is slippery and light rugs are apt to slide, since such rugs are in common use their use is not negligent, unless there is something unusual about them.”
The ruling of the court below is
Affirmed.
