Annette Yacovelli, Respondent, v Pathmark Stores, Inc., Appellant.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Second Department
January 12, 2010
888 N.Y.S.2d 750
Ordered that the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with costs, and the defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint is granted.
On July 8, 2005, a day marked by intermittent rainfall, the plaintiff slipped and fell while entering the defendant’s supermarket. The defendant had laid down two runners or mats at the store’s entrance. One stretched from the first set of automatic doors through the vestibule to a few feet beyond the second set of automatic doors. The second runner started there and continued into the interior of the store. The plaintiff slipped on a section of exposed tile floor at the end, and to the right, of the first runner.
After the accident she noticed there had been an accumulation of water on the floor in the area where she fell. In addition, immediately prior to the accident, both of the doors leading into the store’s vestibule and the interior door leading from the vestibule into the shopping area remained fixed in an open posi
After issue was joined and discovery conducted, the defendant moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. In the order appealed from, the Supreme Court, inter alia, denied the defendant’s motion, and we reverse the order insofar as appealed from.
The defendant established its prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law by demonstrating, through the affidavit of its former assistant store manager and the submission of a videotape of the accident site in the minutes leading up to the accident, that it neither created the alleged hazardous condition nor had actual or constructive notice of it. The defendant’s former assistant manager averred that there was no accumulation of water at the location of the plaintiff’s fall, just inside the entrance to the store, when he inspected the location three minutes before she allegedly fell. The videotape confirmed his presence there and also showed that there was a steady stream of pedestrian traffic into the store going past that location during the period of time immediately prior to the occurrence.
The evidence which the plaintiff submitted in opposition to the defendant’s motion failed to raise a triable issue of fact (see
Dillon, J.P., Florio, Balkin and Leventhal, JJ., concur.
