We granted a writ of certiorari to review
Wintersteen v. Food Lion, Inc.,
FACTS
Wintersteen slipped and fell on a puddle of clear liquid in a Food Lion grocery store. She was walking near a self-service soda fountain equipped with an ice dispenser when the fall occurred. As a result of the fall, she suffered a back injury and underwent surgery for herniated disks; she subsequently filed suit against Food Lion.
At the close of Wintersteen’s case, Food Lion moved for a directed verdict, contending Wintersteen presented no evidence that any Food Lion employee had actual or constructive notice of the presence of the substance on the floor prior to the accident. The trial court denied the motion, concluding Food Lion, by providing its customers with a self-service soda fountain equipped with an ice dispenser, created a foreseeable risk that ice would fall onto the floor and create a dangerous condition. The jury awarded Wintersteen $500,000 in actual damages (reduced by her 45% comparative negligence) and $500,000 punitive damages. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding Wintersteen failed to prove Food Lion had actual or constructive knowledge of the substance on the floor. Accordingly, citing
Simmons v. Winn-Dixie Greenville, Inc.,
ISSUE
Did the Court of Appeals err in holding Food Lion was entitled to a directed verdict?
*35 DISCUSSION
When reviewing the denial of a motion for directed verdict or judgment notwithstanding the verdict, this Court must view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Steinke v. South Carolina Dep’t of Labor,
To recover damages for injuries caused by a dangerous or defective condition on a storekeeper’s premises, the plaintiff must show either (1) that the injury was caused by a specific act of the defendant which created the dangerous condition; or (2) that the defendant had actual or constructive knowledge of the dangerous condition and failed to remedy it.
Anderson v. Racetrac Petroleum Inc.,
Wintersteen does not dispute the trial court’s ruling that Food Lion neither placed the substance on the floor nor had actual or constructive notice thereof. Rather, she contends that, if it is foreseeable an item will fall to the floor, then the storekeeper has a duty to minimize such risks and take measures to prevent the items from falling. Although this approach has some appeal, we decline to depart from our traditional “foreign substance” analysis. We adhere to prior *36 precedent that a storekeeper is liable only upon a showing that it actually placed the foreign substance on the floor, or that it had actual or constructive notice thereof. Simmons v. Winn-Dixie; Hunter v. Dixie Home Stores.
Storekeeper liability is founded upon the duty of care a possessor of land owes to an invitee. Generally, a person owes an invitee the duty of exercising reasonable or ordinary care for his safety and is liable for any injury resulting from the breach of this duty.
Graham v. Whitaker,
To date, we have not required storekeepers to take actions to prevent or minimize the foreseeable risk of a foreign substance on the floor of its premises. 1 In fact, two recent cases reject Wintersteen’s contention.
*37
In
Simmons v. Winn-Dixie Greenville, Inc.,
Similarly, in
Bessinger v. Bi-Lo, Inc.,
We find a very legitimate basis for adherence to our traditional slip and fall analysis. In such cases, although there may be a foreseeable risk that substances will wind up on the floor, there is no specific act of the defendant which causes the substance to arrive there, i.e., it generally arrives there through the handling of a third party. To require shopkeepers to anticipate and prevent the acts of third parties is, in effect, to render them insurers of their customers’ safety. This is simply not the law of this state.
See Hunter v. Dixie Home Stores,
Although some courts have adopted either a “mode of display” or a duty to prevent analysis, such an approach has been criticized. As noted by one court,
In a slip and fall case [the] focus is on whether the defendant acted reasonably in discovering and removing foreign objects from the floor. To shift the inquiry to the storekeeper’s chosen method of displaying and packaging goods would place an unreasonable burden on storekeepers. It simply would not be reasonable to require storekeepers to make it impossible for food items to fall on the floor. Nor, do we think, would such a result be possible.... Some latitude must be allowed to the proprietor of a store to display goods in a manner consistent with the nature of the goods and of the business.
Richardson v. Kroger,
Retail stores exist for the singular purpose of selling goods to customers, and therefore the goods must be subject to removal by store patrons. Sometimes, however, this results in a dangerous condition created when a store’s customers drop products on the floor. Because this danger is a necessary consequence of the retail business, the South Carolina courts appear to rule that such hazards are reasonable as a matter of law so long as they are remedied when discovered. Thus, where the defect results from the unauthorized act of another, the storekeeper is held only to reasonable care in the discovery and remedy or removal of it.
See also Rowe v. Winn-Dixie Stores,
CONCLUSION
We decline to depart from traditional foreign substance analysis: a storekeeper is only liable if it places the substance on the floor, or if it has actual or constructive notice thereof. See Simmons v. Winn-Dixie, supra (declining to expand “foreign substance” liability based upon inherently dangerous condition and foreseeable risk of harm). Accordingly, as Wintersteen failed to prove either of these, Food Lion was properly granted a directed verdict, and the Court of Appeals’ opinion is therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Wintersteen contends this Court and the Court of Appeals did so in
Henderson v. St. Francis Community Hospital,
Pinckney is a Court of Appeals case in which the plaintiff slipped and fell on poinsettia leaves. The Court of Appeals held there was evidence of record from which the jury might have inferred the store manager observed the poinsettia leaves falling to the floor and that the leaves were left on the floor until the next periodic sweeping. Implicit in this finding is a holding that the store had actual or constructive notice of fallen leaves at the time of the plaintiff's fall. Accordingly, Pinckney is of no aid to Wintersteen.
Prior to
Pinckney
and
Henderson,
it was generally held that constructive notice is established through evidence the foreign substance was on
*37
the floor for a sufficient length of time that the storekeeper should have discovered and removed it.
Wimberly v. Winn-Dixie Greenville, Inc.,
