Crawford v. Soennichsen

120 N.W.2d 578, 175 Neb. 87, 1963 Neb. LEXIS 146
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1963
Docket35328
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 120 N.W.2d 578 (Crawford v. Soennichsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Soennichsen, 120 N.W.2d 578, 175 Neb. 87, 1963 Neb. LEXIS 146 (Neb. 1963).

Opinion

White, C. J.

This is a negligence action for damages allegedly sustained by the plaintiff on January 26, 1959, as the result of an accidental daytime fall at about 2:30 p.m., on snow and ice ruts present on a store owner’s hard-surfaced parking lot maintained by him for the use of customer invitees. At the conclusion of all of the evidence in the case, the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant.

The question presented to this court by the assignments of error is whether or not there was sufficient evidence in the record to warrant submitting to the jury the issue of failure by the defendant store owner to exercise ordinary care for the reasonable safety of the plaintiff, which was the proximate cause of her fall and injuries.

*89 In testing the sufficiency of the evidence for determining the propriety of a directed verdict, the plaintiff is entitled to have all controverted facts resolved in her favor, and she is entitled to have the benefit of every inference that can reasonably be drawn from the evidence. Pupkes v. Wilson, 165 Neb. 852, 87 N. W. 2d 556. Where the facts: adduced to sustain an issue are such that but one conclusion can be drawn when related to the applicable law, it is the duty of the court to decide the question as a matter of law and not submit it to a jury. Milk House Cheese Corp. v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. Co., 161 Neb. 451, 73 N. W. 2d 679; Kohl v. Unkel, 163 Neb. 257, 79 N. W. 2d 405.

The testimony in this case, insofar as pertinent to the issue presented here, is undisputed. Giving maximum reach to plaintiff’s testimony, it proves the following facts: Defendant’s retail grocery store has checkout stands at both the front and rear, the rear entrance being to the south. Across an alley to the south, the defendant maintained a parking lot for the use and benefit of employees and customers. The plaintiff was employed in a restaurant abutting the southwest corner of the parking lot. She left her place of employment at about 2:30 p.m., on January 26, 1959, to go to the defendant’s grocery store, as she had numerous times before. Plaintiff walked part of the way across the parking lot, noticing patches of snow and spots of pavement, to a point almost across the parking lot and directly south of the rear entrance to the grocery store. She accidentally fell and slipped on some snow ruts at this point. The sole testimony as to the existence and nature of the snow ruts and the condition, which was the occasion of plaintiff’s fall, is her own testimony as follows:

“Q. Well, Mrs. Crawford, after you came up and stopped at the ruts, what did you do then? A. Well, for a couple or three seconds I was looking to see which was the best way to go, to go to the store, and I figured that was just as good a place as any because they were *90 all ruts and I went to step across with my right foot and down I went on the buttocks and that is the last I remember.”

She further testified that it was her right foot that slipped. She does not state whether she stepped clear over the ruts or not; but that the ruts were 5 or 6 inches wide and 3 or 4 inches deep; that she had crossed 3 or 4 days prior and this condition was not present; and that if she remembered right it had snowed 3 days before, “* * * I think, it had, if I remember right.”

As to the presence of snow, there was testimony from the official weather bureau records at the Omaha Airport and from Nebraska City, to the effect that there was snow of 2.9 inches on January 20 and 21, 1959, and that after the 24th of January, when the temperature went to 50°, the snow went back to a trace.

There is no issue in this case as to the status of plaintiff as a business invitee while crossing the parking lot, or the duty of the business inviter to exercise ordinary care to keep the adjacent parking area in a reasonably safe condition. Broadston v. Beddeo Clothing Co., 104 Neb. 604, 178 N. W. 190; Rogers v. J. C. Penney Co., 127 Neb. 885, 257 N. W. 252; Malolepszy v. Central Market, 143 Neb. 356, 9 N. W. 2d 474. The defendant specifically concedes this, makes no contention as to issue of contributory negligence, and rests his position solely on the proposition that under the law no duty was owed to the plaintiff under the circumstances of this case.

Precisely, then, we address ourselves to the question of the measure of duty the defendant owed the plaintiff under the circumstances. It is elementary that negligence and the duty to use care does not exist in the abstract, but must be measured against a particular set of facts and circumstances. We refer now to the evidence previously recited, and particularly to the fact that this accident occurred at 2:30 p.m., in broad daylight.

In Taylor v. J. M. McDonald Co., 156 Neb. 437, 56 *91 N. W. 2d 610, we classified cases of this: nature.’ and stated that the first class consists of cases where made-quote lighting of a hazardous condition permitted re-. covery. A second class of cases extends the range of. duty to those cases where the defendant created a hazardous condition, such as improperly oiled floor in an aisle, or soap and water on a tiled floor. Glenn v. W. T. Grant Co., 129 Neb. 173, 260 N. W. 811; Rankin v. J. L. Brandeis & Sons, 135 Neb. 86, 280 N. W. 260. We have, furthermore, drawn a distinction between conditions existing inside and outside an inviter’s place of business, holding, in effect, that the duty as to maintenance of floor conditions is higher inside the inviter’s place .of business for the reason that invitees are examining merchandise, and that the inviter invites a condition in which their áttention is diverted to the inspéction of merchandise and the other ordinary incidents of the inviter’s business. Glenn v. W. T. Grant Co., supra; holding followed and affirmed in Brown v. Slack, 159 Neb. 142, 65 N. W. 2d 382.

Perhaps our closest cases, both denying recovery, are Thompson v. Young Men’s Christian Assn., 122 Neb. 843, 241 N. W. 565, and Sokolof v. First National Bank, 122 Neb. 892, 240 N. W. 547. In the Thompson case, the plaintiff slipped, on a wet and slippery outside step, but there was no showing that the defendant created the cond ition, or that there was any notice, actual or implied. In the Sokolof case, the plaintiff entered the lobby of a bank building and slipped oh a wet and soapy floor, and there was no evidence of creation of the condition, or actual knowledge by defendant.

The distinction between these cases and this one is obvious. Here, wé have a condition of natural accumulation of snow from weather-conditions, a complete absence of proof as to the creation of the condition by the: defendant, no proof of knowledge by the defendant, and' conclusive proof by the plaintiff herself of the snowy' and rutty condition she encountered in attempting to *92 cross. Further, the plaintiff testifies that these conditions were not present approximately 3 days before, and then she testifies that she does not remember, but she thinks that it snowed about 3 days before. From this status of the record, it is conjectural and speculative as to when and how the snow ruts, about which the plaintiff testified, came into being.

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120 N.W.2d 578, 175 Neb. 87, 1963 Neb. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-soennichsen-neb-1963.