This action arises out of ah accident which happened to the plaintiff while shopping in the defendant’s department store in the borough of Manhattan. The first floor of the store is divided into two portions on different levels, one about two feet higher than the other. Four broad steps lead from the upper to the lower portion, for a distance of one hundred and eighty feet; from one end of the building to the ■other, this stairway being divided into sections by columns or abutments about eighteen feet apart. Goods were displayed and offered for sale both above aud below these steps. The plaintiff, being on the higher level, desired to proceed to the lower portion of the first flo.or in order to make a purchase there, and attempted for that purpose to descend the short stairway which has been described. In so ■doing she stepped and slipped upon a skid or slide which had been placed upon the steps to form an inclined plane over which trucks were run in moving goods from one level to the other. The skid was about three feet and a half wide, leaving the section of the stairs upon which it was placed unobstructed for over seven feet on each side of it. The plaintiff fell on this slippery runway and was badly hurt.
The duty of the defendant corporation toward customers invited to its department store was to exercise reasonable care to keep the building safe for the use of such, customers. The learned trial judge made this- clear to the jury and no exception was taken to his -charge in -this or any other respect. The motion to dismiss the •complaint, however, raises the question whether there was any evidence in this case that the defendant had not performed the full measure of the duty which it thus owed the plaintiff.
The fact that the stairs were there, and were provided for the use •of customers, did not oblige the defendant to leave them open or unobstructed at all times; and the temporary occupation of a portion of the steps by a slide for trucks, .in order that goods might be •conveyed from one part of the store to another, was in no respect
In regard to contributory negligence, the court'-charged the jury • that if the plaintiff, by the exercise of ordinary care, might" have-seen the run or gangway and avoided it by going down the steps on either side, she could not recover; and also that if -she saw the run- or gangway and voluntarily or unnecessarily attempted to walk upon it, instead of walking down the steps on either side;, where there was-ample room for safe passage, she did so at "her own risk. In order to find their verdict, therefore, the jury must have reached the conclusion that the plaintiff exercised the care, of a reasonably prudent person in stepping upon the slide, as she said she did, without perceiving it was there, and supposing that she was stepping upon the •stairs. It seems to me that this conclusion finds' sufficient support'in. the evidence.' The .plaintiff testified that she had been over the< steps only the day before, and that there was no.board there then: She said the light from without was somewhat obscured by the display of goods near. by. She knew she was approaching and about-to go down the stairs, but there was nothing to suggest.any danger in going on, unless she had looked right down at the very spot.whem she intended to place her advancing foot. Under the circumstances-it cannot be held that she .was bound to do this as., matter of lajv. Her previous experience indicated that the stairway, obviously provided for the convenience of customers, was safe for their use, and. her assumption, without further minute observation, that it óontinued. in the same condition, was in accordance with the habit of most per
The conditions upon which contributory negligence was predicated in the three cases cited on behalf of the appellant were essentially different from the circumstances in the case at bar. In Strutt v. Brooklyn & Rockaway Beach R. R. Co. (
A ruling of the learned trial judge upon the admission of evidence remains to be noticed. The plaintiff was permitted to put in proof tending to show that' her eyesight had been impaired as a result of her fall on the skid in the defendant’s store. The appellant insists that impairment of vision could not properly be proved under the allegation in the complaint that “ the. plaintiff sustained serious and painful internal and other bodily injuries,” and argues that bodily injuries mean injuries to the trunk or main part of the human form as distinguished from the limbs or head. If counsel are right in this, an allegation of bodily injury would not permit proof of injury to hand, foot, nose or ear. Ho such restricted definition is war
I am for the affirmance of the judgment and order appealed from.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.
