Opinion by
Plaintiff, about 48 years of age, entered the store of defendant as a prospective customer on Saturday, February 3, 1951, about 3:50 p.m. It had been snowing intermittently during the day and some of the snow had been carried into the store and melted there. There were two doorways; plaintiff entered the right-hand door and walked about 6 feet — taking 3 or 4 steps — and slipped and fell on the wooden floor and suffered severe injuries. He was nonsuited.
On this appeal it is by now hornbrook law that plaintiff must be given the benefit of every fact and every reasonable inference of fact arising from the evidence, and all conflicts therein must be resolved in his favor:
McDonald v.
Ferrebee,
Plaintiff was looking at the floor; it looked very sloppy; he saw it was wet and dirty and there was a *124 puddle or pool of water about 5 feet in diameter into which he deliberately walked. The aisle was sufficiently wide to have permitted him to have passed by the pool of water if he had gone to his left just by the entrance of the left-hand door. Several witnesses came in after the accident and testified as to the wet floor; two or three witnesses testified to having entered the store three or four or five minutes prior to plaintiff’s accident and that the floor was “plenty wet”, “a puddle”, “a pool of water”, when they entered.
The store was not crowded, the lighting was good where plaintiff fell; plaintiff’s view was not obstructed by other customers or by carrying any package; and ,the only evidence of the existence of the pool of water which was caused by the melted snow was that it had existed for a period of from 3 to 5 minutes.
Under these facts the Court below wisely and correctly granted a nonsuit. Plaintiff failed to prove that defendant had either actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition above described.
In
Lanni v. P. R. R.,
“The defendant in this case was not an insurer; it oAved to the plaintiff only the duty of reasonable care in the circumstances, viz., to correct any unsafe con *125 dition which was discoverable by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence. Plaintiff had the burden of proving a defect or unsafe condition and that defendant had actual or constructive notice thereof. There was no evidence of actual notice. . . /What will amount to constructive notice of a defective or dangerous condition existing upon a defendant’s premises, necessarily varies under the circumstances of each case. Some of the factors affecting the question, in addition to the time elapsing between the origin of the defect and the accident, * are the size and physical condition of the premises, . . . and the opportunity which defendant, as a reasonably prudent person, had to remedy it: Langley v. F. W. Woolworth Co.,47 R.I. 165 ,131 A. 194 . . . .’ ”
No Court has ever held that five minutes is sufficient constructive notice of a dangerous condition; to so Jiold would be to make the defendant an insurer. If that were the law, then every time it rained or snowed the owner of a large department store would have to employ a great many extra people for the sole purpose of inspecting every minute or every five minutes every entrance, aisle, corridor and stairway in the store, in order to instantly clean up and eliminate every wet or possibly slippery, or possibly dangerous condition and every puddle which might be found to exist anywhere in the store. Such a standard is not only unreasonable and unsupported by any authority, but is so absurd that it would bankrupt every large store owner in Pennsylvania.
While no authority is necessary to support such an obvious conclusion,
Sheridan v. Horn & Hardart Baking Co.,
“There was no evidence, apart from the description of general weather conditions, how long the wet and slushy condition of the entry way had existed; no evidence that defendant had taken any measures or no measures to correct it . . . For all we know, an employee may have mopped it up two minutes before Mrs. Sheridan fell. In Flora v. A. & P. Co.,
The Court below entered a nonsuit for the twofold reason of insufficient constructive notice and contributory negligence, citing numerous cases to support its position. We need not decide whether plaintiff was barred from recovery for the additional reason that he was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Italics throughout, ours.
