Appellee-plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. John Ramey brought suit, seeking damages based upon injuries sustained by appellee Mr. Ramey when he slipped and fell in a grocery store which is owned by appellant-defendant Winn-Dixie and managed by appellant-defendant Michael Layton. According to the allegations of appellees’ complaint, appellants had negligently allowed a liquid substance to remain on the store floor, thereby creating a hazardous condition which had caused appellant John Ramey to slip and fall. Appellants answered, *258 denying the material allegations of the complaint. The trial court denied appellants’ motion for summary judgment, but certified its order for immediate review. This appeal results from the grant of appellants’ application for interlocutory review of the trial court’s ruling.
1. In support of their motion for summary judgment, appellants filed the deposition of appellant Layton, wherein he testified that he had inspected the floor where appellee John Ramey had fallen and that he had found it to be dry. This testimony was sufficient to pierce appellees’ allegation that there was a liquid substance on the floor where the slip and fall had occurred. See generally
Food Fair v. Mock,
In the deposition of appellee John Ramey, he testified that, in an attempt to break his fall, he had placed his left hand, palm down, on the floor and that, when he removed his palm from the floor, it was wet. On a motion for summary judgment, “ ‘[t]he evidence must be construed most favorably to the opposing party, and the trial court must give him the benefit of all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence. [Cits.]’ [Cit.]”
Norton v. Ga. R. Bank & Trust,
2. Appellants further enumerate the trial court’s denial of their motion for summary judgment as error on the ground that, under the evidence of record, the issue of their actual or constructive knowledge of the hazardous condition has been eliminated from the case.
“ ‘(I)n order to state a cause of action in a case where the plaintiff alleges that due to an act of negligence by the defendant he slipped and fell on a foreign substance on the defendant’s floor, the plaintiff must show (1) that the defendant had actual
or
constructive
*259
knowledge of the foreign substance. . . .’ [Cit.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
Filmore v. Fulton-DeKalb Hosp. Auth.,
Appellee John Ramey testified that he saw none of appellants’ employees in the area where his fall occurred. This testimony does not, however, establish such a lack of appellants’ constructive knowledge as to authorize the grant of their motion for summary judgment. “Constructive knowledge may be inferred where there is evidence that an employee of the owner was in the immediate vicinity of the dangerous condition and could easily have noticed and removed the hazard. [Cit.] Liability based on constructive knowledge may
also
be established by showing that the owner failed to exercise reasonable care in inspecting the premises, but recovery under that approach requires proof of the length of time the dangerous condition was allowed to exist. [Cits.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
Hughes v. Hosp. Auth. of Floyd County,
Judgment affirmed.
