Cox v. Goldstein

53 So. 2d 354, 255 Ala. 664, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 29, 1951
Docket6 Div. 931
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 53 So. 2d 354 (Cox v. Goldstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Goldstein, 53 So. 2d 354, 255 Ala. 664, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 382 (Ala. 1951).

Opinion

*665 LIVINGSTON, Chief Justice.

The record shows an action on the case charging negligence resulting in personal injuries, brought by the appellant, Mrs. Thomas E. Cox, against appellees, Joe Goldstein and The New Williams, a corporation, operating a ladies’ ready-to-wear store in Birmingham, Alabama.

The complaint, in its one count, charges simple negligence in the maintenance of the floor of the entrance-way of defendants’ store in an unsafe condition for the use of customers entering the store, proximately resulting in plaintiff’s sustaining a fall while entering the store for the purpose of making a purchase.

The single error assigned is the action of the trial court in giving, at the written request of defendants, the affirmative charge, with hypothesis.

To sustain the assignment of error, appellant, in brief, states the evidence as follows:

“The evidentiary facts presented by the record are few and simple, and substantially without dispute.
“About the middle of the afternoon on New Year’s Eve, 1947, the plaintiff, a widow of middle age, accompanied by another lady, entered the outer lobby or vestibule of the defendants’ ladies’ ready-to-wear store in Birmingham for the purpose of purchasing a dress. It was raining at the time and had been raining since 11:42 in the morning, the rainfall being described as from ‘light’ to ‘moderate’. The plaintiff was wearing shoes with leather soles and medium heels.
“After traversing a few steps into the entrance-way, the plaintiff’s feet slipped forward and out from under her, and she fell upon the floor of the vestibule in a sitting position. When she arose from her fall her hose and clothing were found to be wet and muddy.
“The flooring of the vestibule or entrance-way where plaintiff sustained her fall consisted of a composition called ‘terrazzo’, which is made of marble chips imbedded in white cement mortar, and nothing more. The defendants’ architect-witness described it as not being an ‘approved’ type floor.
“A sample of this terrazzo flooring was introduced in evidence for the inspection of the jury, and will be available for the inspection of this Court under certificate of the Clerk. It will be readily apparent from examination of this sample that the floor of the vestibule upon which plaintiff “fell was, even in the absence of water, extremely hard, impervious to water, smooth, and slick.
“As will be apparent from the photograph of the entrance-way introduced in evidence and transmitted to this Court the floor of the vestibule was exposed without protection to the weather. In addition to the rainfall at and preceding the plaintiff’s injury, gusts of brisk wind were blowing at a velocity of twenty-eight (28) miles per hour.
“This hard and slick-surfaced floor of the vestibule led directly to the door from the public sidewalk, was wet and very slippery, and its entire area was ‘awfully’ wet with muddy water.
“In entering the store, the plaintiff was proceeding at an ‘average’ walk — she was ‘in no rush’.
“As a result of her fall, the plaintiff sustained severe back injury, and was compelled to wear a steel brace, which she was still required to wear at the time of the trial some eighteen months later.”

While we do not disagree with appellant’s foregoing statement of the evidence, we do think that for the purpose of clarity we may quote the record on the question as to whether the floor was an ‘approved’ type floor, and, as to whether the water on the floor was ‘muddy’.

Mr. James A. Lewis, an architect in the city of Birmingham, Alabama, a witness for defendants, testified, in part, as follows:

“Q. And did you design the present floor and the present front of the building *666 on Third-Avenue¡ known as The New Williams? A. Yes, my firm had that job.
“Q. Yes, sir. And are you familiar with the type and kind of floor that is in the vestibule or the outer entrance leading into the store proper? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And how would you describe that floor? What type and kind of floor is it? A. Well, that is called a terrazzo floor, and it is — it consists of marble chips imbedded in cement mortar.
“Q. And is that an approved type and kind of floor for use in that particular situation as it was used there? A. No, that floor has been used since the days of the Romans.
“Q. Well, I say, is it standard and approved? A. Oh, yes, sir, yes. I would say most of the stores, commercial stores—
“Q. You said ‘no’ a moment ago; I didn’t know whether you understood my question or not. A. What I meant was, it is not an approved type; it is a very old floor, dating back to—
“Q. Well, it is standard or — A. It is standard; it is a standard floor, yes, sir.
“Q. Do you know of any other buildings up and down Third Avenue there that use that type of floor for an entrance to their stores? A. Well,! think on that side of the street that most of them do. I know Odom, Bowers & White, and next to them is Bond Clothing Company, The Vanity Boot Shop and the Guarantee Shoe Store, I know they all have that same type of floor in the vestibules.
“Q. Is there any such floors here in the Court House ? A. All your corridor floors, your lobby floors and your entrance floors on the first floor down there are terrazzo floors.
“Q. When you say ‘terrazzo’, will you just tell the jury what terrazzo means in the ordinary, every-day language of a layman? A. Well, I just said a minute ago it is nothing more than marble chips imbedded in cement or mixed with cement mortar.
“Q. And was — in the construction of the floor, was it so laid and arranged and designed that there would be drainage from the floor, or not? A. Yes. We have to have slight drainage, otherwise water would run into the building.
■ “Q. Well, is the drainage from the, store to the gutter or the sidewalk? A. Yes.
“Q. And that was adequate to drain any standing water off of that floor? ’ A. Yes.”

Mrs. Joe R. Parker, a witness for appellant, and who was with appellant when she fell, testified in part as follows:

“Q. Now, describe to the court and jury the condition of the surface at the point where you say she sat down. A. Well, it was — it had been raining and was raining, and it was slippery. The water had been tracked back and forth in there, and it was very slippery, because it seemed like it was muddy like, not mud, but, you know, how streets and walks are when it has been dragged back and forth, and it was wet and slippery.
. “Q. Now, did you observe her clothing after she sat down? A. Yes, sir; I helped her clean her clothes off.
“Q. Maam? A.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 2d 354, 255 Ala. 664, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-goldstein-ala-1951.