Bowes v. Lerner Shops International, Inc.
This text of 422 So. 2d 1041 (Bowes v. Lerner Shops International, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The appellant, Dorothy Bowes, seeks to reverse a summary judgment granted to the appellee, Lerner Shops. The facts are not in dispute. Mrs. Bowes, then age 54, was shopping in the appellee’s store on January 26,1978. She entered a dressing room in the store to try on a pantsuit. The dressing rooms all lacked chairs or other means of support to aid customers while they were trying on clothes. In trying to remove the pants while standing, Mrs. Bowes lost her balance and fell, as a result of which she broke her hip. She filed suit alleging, in essence, that Lerner Shops was negligent in failing to provide her with a safe place to change clothes, more specifically claiming that the store’s failure to provide her with a chair or some other means of support was a breach of that duty and the cause of her fall. The store asserted that it was free of negligence and that the accident was caused solely by her own negligence. The trial court agreed.
In Burmeister v. American Motorists Insurance Co., 403 So.2d 541, 542 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981), this court said: “It is well accepted that a storekeeper must exercise ordinary or reasonable care to see that those portions of the premises which persons may be expected to use are reasonably safe.”1 We also held in Cincinnati Insurance Co. v. Schneider, 349 So.2d 728, 729 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977): “The law does not favor summary judgments in negligence cases, particularly where defenses of contributory negligence or assumption of the risk are involved, and any doubt should be resolved in favor of a jury trial. Bess v. 17545 Collins Avenue, Inc., 98 So.2d 490 (Fla.1957).”
Both of our previous decisions are applicable to this case. Whether the appel-lee store’s failure to provide its fitting room with a chair, bench, handrail, or other means of support for its customers constituted negligence proximately causing Mrs. Bowes to fall was a question for the jury. Similarly, whether and to what extent Mrs. Bowes was negligent in attempting to [1043]*1043change her clothes while standing, without support, is equally for the jury to decide.2
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
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422 So. 2d 1041, 1982 Fla. App. LEXIS 22149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowes-v-lerner-shops-international-inc-fladistctapp-1982.