Plaintiff-appellant, an invitee who slipped and fell on ice located on business premises, appeals from the grant of summary judgment to the defendant-appellee, the proprietor of the business.
1. Appellee’s original motion for summary judgment was denied on August 18,1980. The second motion, which was granted and which is the basis for the instant appeal, was made some nine months later, in May of 1981. In the interim between the denial of the first motion for summary judgment and the grant of the second, there was no expansion of the record to include any additional significant evidence. In related enumerations of error appellant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion and erred in “rehearing” appellee’s motion for summary judgment which had originally been denied.
Appellant contends, in essence, that absent an expansion of the record, appellee’s second motion for summary judgment was no more than a renewal of the previously denied motion and the trial court was without authority to consider and to grant it. “After a review of statutory and case authority, we conclude that it is within the discretion of a trial judge to consider a renewed motion for summary judgment even without an expansion of the record.”
Premium Dist. Co. v. Nat. Dist. Co.,
2. Appellant enumerates as error the merits of the grant of summary judgment to appellee, contending that under the evidence of record genuine issues of material fact remained for jury resolution.
Resolution of this question requires that we establish as a predicate the applicable legal principles and parameters within which the facts of the instant case must be considered. “ [I]n order for [a plaintiff in a slip and fall case such as this] to recover, two elements must exist: (1) fault on the part of the owner, and (2) ignorance of the danger on the part of the invitee, [cit.].”
Pound v. Augusta Nat.,
Central to the facts of this case is an ice storm which occurred in the Atlanta area on January 12-13,1978. It is undisputed that both appellant and appellee had actual knowledge of the generally prevailing meteorological conditions in the Atlanta area on the morning of January 13,1978 and were aware that sleet and frozen rain had accumulated overnight. With specific regard to the conditions existing at appellee’s business premises and the measures taken with regard thereto, the evidence shows that appellee’s maintenance crew apparently arrived at 7 a.m. and began work pursuant to appellee’s “inclement weather procedures” which anticipated that “any corrective measures needed [would] be taken in sufficient time before customers begin arriving for 10:00 a.m. opening.” Appellee’s maintenance crew apparently began to take such established corrective actions with regard to the icy conditions existing on the sidewalk areas of the premises, including manually chipping away ice, spreading salt and roping off hazardous areas. Despite these “corrective” activities appellee concedes that its maintenance crew made “no efforts” to remove the ice from in front of one of the entrances into the premises, ostensibly because such efforts were not deemed necessary.
Under these circumstances, a finding would be authorized that appellee was at “fault” with regard to any hazardous icy condition existing at this entrance and had at least constructive knowledge thereof. See generally
Winn-Dixie Stores v. Hardy,
On the morning of January 13, 1978, appellant called to determine whether appellee would be open for business despite the weather conditions. Appellant was told by appellee that the business would be opening at approximately 10:30 a.m. Acting on this information, appellant drove to appellee’s premises. She encountered no ice in appellee’s parking lot. Appellant was, however, keeping a vigilant lookout for the presence of ice on her path and, as *16 she approached the entrance, she saw that there were some icy accumulations on the sidewalk. Apparently with this knowledge appellant elected to stay on the relatively ice-free parking lot surface until such time as she could find a safe place to step up on the sidewalk. Believing that she had in fact discovered a safe place to step up onto the sidewalk and enter appellee’s premises, appellant attempted to do so. Appellant immediately slipped on “[a]n almost invisible patch of ice that [she] could not see until [she] fell [on it]...” It is this evidence which appellee urges demonstrates, as a matter of law, that appellant had at least “equal knowledge” of the hazard and that she cannot recover.
We find appellee’s arguments in this regard totally unpersuasive. This evidence demonstrates conclusively that appellant had no actual knowledge of the “invisible” ice hazard. Appellant’s testimony establishes that “[she] was looking, but [she] didn’t see any ice there. So, that was what made [her] step up [onto the sidewalk] where [she] did.” Furthermore, the evidence demonstrates no basis for a finding that appellant had constructive knowledge of the “invisible” ice hazard. Compare
Pound,
Judgment reversed.
