The plaintiff fell on the tile floor of the aisle of a Wal-Mart where he was shopping, and severely injured his knee. A broken can of women’s shaving lotion was found nearby; the plaintiff had slipped on lotion spilled from the can. Two employees of Wal-Mart testified by deposition that they had walked down the aisle just minutes before the accident and had seen no sign of spillage, but the plaintiff testified that he had been waiting in the aisle for his wife for ten minutes and during that time had neither seen any employees nor heard any sound of breakage. Concluding that the lotion had been on the floor for four or at most ten minutes, the district court, citing
Hresil v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
A business owes its customers, as invitees, the duty to take reasonable care to avoid injuring them. E.g.,
Wiegman v. Hitch-Inn Post of Libertyville, Inc.,
There is no evidence that any of Wal-Mart’s employees were aware of the spillage that caused the plaintiffs injury and failed to clean it up; and there is, as we have pointed out, no duty of continuous inspection. But neither is there any flat rule in Illinois that ten minutes is always too short a period for a duty of inspection and clean up to arise; at least
Hresil
does not announce such a rule, for the court there pointed to facts, such as that the store was not busy (and so the likelihood of spillage less), that made ten minutes too short a time
in the circumstances
of that case to indicate a lack of care. Cf.
Jackson v. Delchamps, Inc.,
Wal-Mart hurt itself (as it did in
Howard v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., supra,
as we noted in our opinion there) in two ways. The first was by presenting evidence (just as it had done in
Gump v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
