Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of nonsuit in a slip and fall ease. The sole question herein is whether the evidence, as viewed most favorably to plaintiff, is sufficient to support a judgment in her favor.
Defendants operate a market in San Jose. Adjacent thereto is a small paved parking lot accommodating about *560 three cars and maintained by the market for the use of its patrons.
On Sunday, April 27, 1958, about 2:30 o’clock p. m., plaintiff walked across the lot and into the market. After making several purchases she left over the same route. The day was described by her as being “very nice.” After taking six to eight steps across the lot, plaintiff slipped on a foreign substance, which was apparently chocolate ice cream, and fell. She did not see this substance either on her way into or out of the market. The area where the ice cream lay is viewable from the check stand in the market by looking through a glass door and window.
Plaintiff was a business invitee on the lot as well as in the market and defendants owed the duty of exercising ordinary care to avoid injury to her. Plaintiff does not contend that the mere happening of the accident raises any inference of negligence by defendants or that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is applicable. (See
Vaughn
v.
Montgomery Ward & Co.,
The issue in dispute may be generally stated to be whether there is sufficient evidence to support a finding that defendants had constructive notice of the condition complained of in time to have remedied it before the accident occurred.
The decisive point of inquiry is the length of time the condition had existed. It is reasonable to infer that someone had purchased ice cream at defendants’ market (even though another market is on the opposite corner) and had then left by the same route later taken by plaintiff; that this someone had dropped the ice cream, or some of it, on the pavement at the point where plaintiff fell.
But there is absolutely no evidence from which any conclusion at all can be drawn as to the length of time the ice cream had been there. In plaintiff’s brief, there is mention of “melted” ice cream and the argument is made that, it having been purchased in a frozen state, there is “a strong probability that the ice cream lay melting upon the asphalt a sufficient enough time to afford notice ’ ’ to defendants.
The weakness of this argument is that there is no testimony as to the condition of the ice cream at the time of the accident. The only testimony as to the ice cream being there at all was *561 given by plaintiff and she never at any time described its condition or stated that it was “melted” or “melting.”
Plaintiff had the burden of producing evidence of the existence of the condition complained of for at least a sufficient time to support a finding that defendants had constructive notice thereof. This she failed to do.
The plaintiff in
Louie
v.
Hagstrom’s Food Stores,
In
Travis
v.
Metropolitan Theatres Corp.,
In the instant case there was no evidence comparable to that in the Louie and Travis cases. Any inference as to the length of time which the ice cream had been there would be based upon pure speculation and conjecture.
In
Girvetz
v.
Boys’ Market, Inc.,
In
Frank
v.
J. C. Penney Co., Inc.,
. . . There is no such description of the oil seen by appellant [plaintiff] as would indicate that it had accumulated in the depression over a long period of time and there is nothing in the nature of the slight depression she described which would afford support for an inference that it had been collecting oil for any period of time. . . . There is nothing to show that oil or any wet substance had been on the floor for any length of time at all. We are not permitted under the rules to indulge in pure speculation on such matters. It was for plaintiff to prove her case. Giving to the nonsuit rule as so frequently stated its full scope [citation], we are constrained to hold that nonsuit was proper.” (Pp. 126-127.)
In
Oldenburg
v.
Sears, Roebuck
&
Co.,
We so hold in the instant case. There is no substantial evidence from which it can be reasonably inferred that the ice cream had been at the place of plaintiff’s fall for a sufficient period of time to charge defendants with constructive notice of its presence and, in the exercise of reasonable care, to remedy such condition.
The judgment is affirmed.
Kaufman, P. J., and Shoemaker, J., concurred.
