This is an action by an employee against her employer for damages resulting from injuries she suffered while at work. Because West Virginia’s workmen’s compensation statute generally shields an employer from common law tort actions for personal injuries suffered by an employee during the course of his employment, a plaintiff may bring suit only if his case falls within an exception to the statute. Plaintiff contends here, as she did below, that her case falls within the exception construed by the West Virginia Supreme Court in
Mandolidis v. Elkins Industries, Inc.,
I.
On the day of her injury, plaintiff was employed in the dishroom of defendant’s hospital. The dishroom contained a large table with a conveyor running from one end to the other. At the end of the conveyor where plaintiff worked were two openings over large garbage disposals. The dishroom employees picked up the dirty dishes as they reached the end of the conveyor and scraped their contents into one of the disposal openings.
Plaintiff testified that in late November or early December 1978 the disposal on one side of the table stopped functioning. It was removed and a part needed to repair the unit was ordered. In the meantime, a five gallon bucket was placed under the opening where the disposal had been to catch the food scraped from the dirty dishes. Plaintiff testified, however, that the bucket did not catch all of the scrapings, and that the spilled water and food made the floor wet and slippery. On March 14, 1979, plaintiff was carrying a tray of silverware near the scrape table when she slipped on some food scraps on the floor and fell, causing a compression fracture of the seventh dorsal vertebra.
II.
This court has discussed the West Virginia Supreme Court’s decision in
Mandolidis
at considerable length in
Smith v. ACF Industries, Inc.,
A number of facts were relevant to our decision in Smith. The condition that caused plaintiff’s injury had existed for nine years, during which the condition had occasioned no serious or even substantial injury. The court reasoned that the employer might reasonably have believed, from this absence of injuries, that its warning system made the equipment safe.
III.
Plaintiff has offered no evidence to bring her case within the Mandolidis standards. Plaintiff did testify that sometime after the disposal was removed another employee, Cynthia Gay, slipped and fell while coming around to the side of the table where the five gallon bucket was emptied into the other disposal. But plaintiff did not explain why Mrs. Gay fell, or whether she was injured in any way. Similarly, plaintiff testified she saw Margaret Hagley slip in the dishroom, but did not state any reason *94 for the slip or whether Mrs. Hagley was injured. More importantly, plaintiff failed to proffer any evidence that her employer was aware of these two incidents.
In the absence of any evidence that the employer knew that its employees were unreasonably exposed “to great, recognized risks of serious harm,”
Smith,
The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was erroneously denied.
REVERSED.
