279 Mass. 574 | Mass. | 1932
The plaintiff, who kept his automobile in the public garage of the defendant, fell on about the third step of a stairway leading from the second to the first floor of the building and received injury. The declaration alleges that the stairway was unsafe “by reason of the worn and slippery condition of the metal treads thereon and by the accumulation of oil, grease or other slippery substance.” At the close of the evidence the trial judge directed a verdiet for the defendant and the plaintiff’s exception to that ruling is here presented.
There was evidence from which it could be found that the plaintiff was on the premises and the stairway by invitation of the defendant so that it owed to the plaintiff the duty to use reasonable care to keep the premises including the stairway in a safe condition for the plaintiff’s use. The testimony of witnesses and photographs which were in evidence show that projections on the treads of the iron stairway were worn shiny and smooth, but no such condition appeared as to warrant the conclusion that the stairway was unsafe merely as the result of wear. On the facts this case is distinguishable from the case of Bennett v. Jordan Marsh Co. 216 Mass. 550. The plaintiff testified that he knew he slipped on grease and oil and that as he slipped he felt a greasy substance on the stairway. The presence of such a substance on the stairway must be taken to have been an essential cause of the fall. There was no evidence that the substance which caused the plain
There Was no evidence as to how large an area of the surface of the tread was covered by the substance or as to its thickness, shape, consistency, hardness, color or general appearance from which an inference might be drawn that it had been on the stairway any appreciable length of time. The testimony of the plaintiff that when he arrived home there was wet oil on the knee of his trousers and the testimony of another witness, who saw the substance after the plaintiff stepped upon it and fell, that it then showed a smear or mark such as the plaintiff’s foot might have made do not indicate that it had been there long. An inference that the substance had been on the stairway long enough
Since the evidence did not warrant the finding either that the substance came upon the stairway by negligence of the defendant or its employees or that it was there long enough so that the defendant could be found negligent in not discovering and removing it, the verdict for the defendant was rightly directed.
Exceptions overruled.