Clement v. Bohning

159 So. 2d 495, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2219
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1963
DocketNo. 5996
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 So. 2d 495 (Clement v. Bohning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clement v. Bohning, 159 So. 2d 495, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2219 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

LANDRY, Judge.

This is a “slip down case” in which plaintiffs, Edward D. and Maude Me C. Clement, husband and wife, sue for recovery of damages for personal injuries and medical expense sustained and incurred as the result of an accident in which Mrs. Clement, a patron in the supermarket of defendant, Alvin Bohning d/b/a Bohning & Company, received injuries to her ankle and back when she fell behind the meat counter of defendant’s establishment while supervising the cutting of ham ordered by plaintiff from defendant’s employee. The trial court rendered judgment against defendants, Alvin Bohning d/b/a Bohning & Co. and Bohn-ing’s liability insurer, Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, in solido, in favor of [496]*496plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Clement, in the sums of $1,750.00 and $180.00, rspectively, and from said adverse adjudication, defendants have appealed.

Except as hereinafter otherwise noted, the facts of this case are relatively simple and undisputed. Defendant Bohning is the operator of an establishment currently known as a supermarket which business, consisting of a combined grocery and meat market, is conducted by defendant in a single building situated in the City of Ponchatoula. On January 30, 1960, plaintiff, Mrs. Clement, accompanied by her niece, Miss Marguerite Clement, was a customer in defendant’s establishment, having entered the store to purchase two slices or cuts of ham. Miss Clement, being more familiar with the establishment than her aunt, volunteered to purchase the desired ham and proceeded to go behind the meat counter to personally supervise not only the cutting of the ham desired by Mrs. Clement but also some beef meat which Miss Clement wished to purchase for herself. Plaintiff accompanied her niece behind the meat counter and when the desired merchandise was cut to order, the ladies started to leave with their purchases whereupon plaintiff fell and sustained the injuries which form'the basis of this lawsuit.

Plaintiffs, of course, rely upon the well recognized principle that the operators of establishments such as public stores and shops are bound to the duty of reasonable care to keep their premises safe for invitees. In this connection, plaintiffs maintain defendant was negligent in permitting ■the floor behind the meat counter to become unsafe to customers by allowing moisture and meat particles to remain on the floor thereby resulting in the floor being wet, slippery and dangerous. Additionally, plaintiffs maintain defendant was aware of the unsafe condition thus created on its premises but, notwithstandng such knowledge, failed to take protective or corrective measures to minimize the peril to its customers. Finally, plaintiffs contend defendant was negligent in failing to barricade the entrance to the area behind the meat counter to prevent customers from entering the dangerous section of the premises and failing to post adequate warning signs to alert customers to the peril involved.

In resisting plaintiffs’ demands, defendants acknowledge the general rule relied upon by plaintiffs but contend it is without application in the case at bar inasmuch as plaintiff was not an invitee because plaintiff’s injury occurred in an area reserved exclusively for the use of defendant and his employees. It is defendants’ contention the invitee rule is not apropos the case at bar because plaintiff wandered onto a portion of the premises not ordinarily and usually open to the public, without invitation express or implied, consequently plaintiff was a mere licensee to whom no duty of care is owed other than the obligation to refrain from wilfully or wantonly injuring the licensee, or setting traps for him or recklessly and wantonly exposing the licensee to danger. Defendants also maintain the area behind the meat counter was not dangerous; that certain precautions were taken by defendant to guard against slips and falls by its employees working in the meat department; that if there was any danger defendant was unaware thereof; and that plaintiff has failed to discharge the burden incumbent upon her of establishing the cause of her fall. Alternatively, defendants allege plaintiff’s contributory negligence in failing to use ordinary care and caution to avoid the danger of which plaintiff complains.

Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue there is no merit to defendants’ position that plaintiff was in a portion or section of the store reserved for the exclusive use of defendant and his employees, because it was a common practice for customers to go behind the meat counter. Based on this premise, plaintiffs aver defendant’s duty of maintaining his premises in reasonably safe condition extended to and included the area behind the meat counter where plaintiff slipped and fell.

[497]*497 Our jurisprudence is well settled to the effect that an owner or operator of a public establishment such as a store, shop, market or other commercial enterprise, owes to his customers, as invitees, the duty of reasonable care to protect them while on his premises. The duty of care extends to protection of the invitee against reasonably discoverable dangerous conditions in the floors, aisles, passageways and portions of the premises to which the invitee may reasonably be expected to go while on the premises in the ordinary course of events depending, of course, in each case, upon the character, nature and type of the business involved. While the storekeeper is not the insurer of the safety of his customers, nevertheless he owes the duty of maintaining the floors and passageways of his establishment in a reasonably safe condition for use in a manner consistent with the purpose of the premises and in doing so must exercise that degree of care required of an ordinarily prudent person under similar circumstances. Cannon v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, La.App., 146 So.2d 804; Hickingbottom v. T. G. & Y. Stores of Louisiana, Inc., La.App., 147 So.2d 102.

The rule, however, does not apply to portions of the owner or operator’s premises not customarily open to the public and to which no invitation, express or implied, has been extended by the owner, operator or the employees of the owner or operator. Thus in Foshee v. Grant, 152 La. 303, 93 So. 102, the Supreme Court denied recovery to the patron of a barroom who entered the wareroom of the owner’s premises and, after being served therein, received injuries when he sat on a barrel and was burned with lye. The court therein reasoned plaintiff was not an invitee since he went onto a portion of the premises not open to the public but set aside solely for the use of defendant and his employees.

The general rule regarding liability of the owner or operator of stores, shops, markets and similar establishments is succinctly put in Am.Jur., Verbo Negligence § 100, page 761, as follows:

“§ 100. Part of premises upon Which Injury is Sustained.
An owner of occupant is liable for an injury sustained by a person, who entered the premises by invitation, as a result of a defective condition of the premises only where the part of the premises upon which the injury was sustained was covered by the invitation. If a person, although on the premises by invitation, goes to a place not covered by the invitation, the owner’s duty of care owed to such person as an invitee ceases forthwith. Thus, where one enters a part of the premises reserved for the use of the occupant and his employees, and to which there was no express or implied invitation to go, there can be no recovery for resulting injury, even though he is an invitee to other parts of the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 So. 2d 495, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-bohning-lactapp-1963.