Appellant, Mrs. Belva Wallace, sued appellee, J. C. Penny Company, Inc., for damages resulting from personal injuries received when she slipped and fell on the floor of the foyer, arcade or entrance-way to defendant’s store in Jackson. The jury returned a verdict for defendant. We have concluded that an instruction given defendant on assumption of risk was error, but not reversible error, because plaintiff has no cause of action and is not entitled to recover in any event.
On December 7, 1957, Mrs. Wallace and her 12 year old daughter, Virginia, were Christmas shopping. It had been raining- rather heavily since the preceding midnight, and the sidewalks and streets were wet. They were also crowded with other Christmas shoppers. Appellee’s store faces on Capitol Street. The entrance has a foyer with display windows on each side. The part of the foyer next to the sidewalk is unenclosed, and one enters the enclosed part of the store after walking through the foyer to the doors. This arcade is paved with terrazzo tile, with a slight rise into the store. Mrs. Wallace was walking with a large crowd on the arcade floor, preparatory to going into appellee’s building. When she stepped between a post and a display case in the arcade, her feet suddenly slipped from under her and she fell. She did not notice the floor before her fall, but subsequently she observed that it was wet, muddy and slippery, and looked as if people had been walking on it “for days.” She and her daughter had been walking on the wet pavement and streets, shopping in other places. Her daughter, who was present when plaintiff fell, and her husband and another witness, who did not see her fall, said that it had been raining all morning, and the floor of the arcade was wet, muddy and slick. The crowds had tracked on the floor water and dirt. Appellee offered no witnesses, moved for a directed verdict, and requested a peremptory instruction. These were denied, and the
Appellant’s sole assignment of error is instruction Number 6 given defendant: “The Court instructs the jury for the defendant that the plaintiff in this case assumed the ordinary risks and hazards of entering the entrance to defendant’s store over a terrazzo paved walkway entrance or foyer; that is, she assumed such risks and dangers as were open and obvious to a person of ordinary discretion, intelligence and foresight and if you believe that the plaintiff saw, knew and appreciated the danger, or should have seen, known and appreciated the danger by the exercise of her own reasonable care and caution in attempting to walk upon the terrazzo floor when it was wet and slick and in attempting to walk over said floor she slipped and fell and was injured, then you must find for the defendant.”
This instruction was error because it erroneously applied the assumption of risk doctrine, which is pertinent when a party voluntarily and knowingly places himself in a position or submits himself to a condition, appreciating that injury to himself is likely to occur at any time so long as such position or condition continues. Saxton v. Rose,
Strand Enterprises, Inc. v. Turner,
Although the instruction was incorrect, it was not reversible error. Rule 11 of this Court states: “No judgment shall be reversed on the ground of misdirection to the jury . . . unless it shall affirmatively appear, from the whole record, that such judgment has resulted in a miscarriage of justice.”
3 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error, Sections 1111 and 1112, state this same principle in other ways: ‘ ‘ One test that has been frequently held determinative of the prejudicial character of error in instructions is the correctness of the result; if that is correct, the error is not reversible. When the undisputed evidence establishes the correctness of the verdict, so that either with or without the erroneous instruction the verdict could not have been otherwise than it was and, had it been otherwise, it would have been set aside by the court, or if the result is one that might properly be directed by the court, technical errors will be disregarded.... Error in instructions is not prejudicial as against an unsuccessful plaintiff who has no cause of action, or who is hot entitled to recover in any event, or who fails in his evidence to support the cause of action, ...”
Horton v. Jones,
In addition to Strand Enterprises, Inc. v. Turner, supra, five other Mississippi cases should he noted:
In Western Union Tel. Co. v. Blakely,
Daniel v. Jackson Infirmary,
In Patterson v. Sayers, doing business as the Concord Hotel,
In Paramount-Richards Theatres v. Price,
In each such case the question is whether defendant was guilty of negligence which contributed to plaintiff’s injuries. Plaintiff must show more than a fall. There
“So also the fact that water, slush, and mud are tracked in on the floor of premises because of weather conditions outside ordinarily does not create an actionable situation, although the floor is thereby rendered wet, dirty, and slippery, except, perhaps, in some circumstances, as where it is shown that the construction of the entranceway was inherently dangerous or that the person responsible for the condition of the premises failed to use due care to remedy unreasonably dangerous conditions after actual or constructive notice thereof.”
On the same line of cases, 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, Sec. 136 states: “The existence of a slippery place on the floor of a store, on which a customer falls, sustaining injury, is in violation of the proprietor’s duty only where he knows or reasonably should know of the presence of this dangerous condition and reasonably could prevent it or warn, the customer of the danger. The fact that during a rainstorm some water was thrown into the front of a store, due to the frequent opening of the door by customers, thereby causing- the floor to become more slippery than usual, will not give rise to an action against the owner for injuries to a patron who slips upon such floor.”
Perhaps the leading case is S. S. Kresge v. Fagan,
In brief, the test of liability is not danger, but negligence, which is the failure of defendant to take such reasonable care as should be taken by prudent men. The evidence wholly fails to reflect any negligence by appellee. Certainly the company was not required to keep a large force of moppers in this open entrance-way to its store during the progress of the rain, in order to mop up the water and dirt as fast as it was tracked or blown in. Plaintiff failed to show that the condition existed for such a length of time that in the exercise of ordinary care the proprietor should have known of it and should have taken action to remedy it. 61 A. L. R. 2d 13. A store keeper owes to a customer the duty to exercise ordinary care to have his building in a reasonably safe condition. But he is not the insurer of the safety of his customers. The wet and dirty condition of the floor of the foyer was caused by the continuing rains and by public use of the entrance-way. It was not caused by appellee, and the evidence does not indicate any failure by appellee in its duty to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition, under the circumstances prevailing at the time. Since the verdict and judgment
Affirmed.
