Denver Dry Goods Co. v. Pender

262 P.2d 257, 128 Colo. 281, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 21, 1953
Docket17034
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 262 P.2d 257 (Denver Dry Goods Co. v. Pender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver Dry Goods Co. v. Pender, 262 P.2d 257, 128 Colo. 281, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 271 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holland

delivered the opinion of the court.

Dependant in error, as plaintiff, on November 21, 1950, filed a complaint containing five causes of action, and seeking damages in the sum of $75,483 for injuries resulting from a fall on May 6, 1948 in the coffee shop operated by defendant, here plaintiff in error. The fifth cause of action was for exemplary damages in the sum of $10,000, which was stricken by order of court. In substance, plaintiff alleged that defendant was in sole possession and control of the coffee shop and all appurtenances thereto; that it caused to be placed some liquid substance of a character unknown to her on the floor of said coffee shop near plaintiff; that it was negligent in allowing the floor to remain in said condition; further negligent by failing to place any warning signs showing the condition of the floor; and in not taking the necessary action to remove the substance from the floor and insure its safety, as it knew, or should have known, its dangerous condition. Defendant answered, admitting ownership and operation of the coffee shop, but denying *283 the dangerous condition of the floor; or that it negligently maintained the same; or that it placed or caused to be placed any foreign substance on the floor. It affirmatively alleged negligence on the part of plaintiff; that the incident was an unavoidable accident; and that the complaint fails to state a claim against defendant upon which relief could be granted. The issues as made were tried to a jury on September 23, 1952. Motions of defendant for dismissal at the close of plaintiff’s case and for directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, were denied.

Upon given instructions, the jury on September 26, 1952, returned its verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $15,000. Judgment was reserved until disposition of motion for new trial, which was filed by defendant joining therewith a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. These motions were denied; judgment was entered on the verdict; and in due course, the case is before us for review.

Defendant company, then and now, contends that the trial court erred in overruling motion for dismissal at the close of plaintiff’s case, and also in denying motion for directed verdict; that the case was tried by counsel for plaintiff on the theory of res ipsa loquitur, which doctrine is not applicable to the facts; that there was no evidence to charge defendant with notice or knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the moist spot on the floor of defendant’s premises; that plaintiff’s evidence presented no more than an equal choice of probabilities as to the cause of her injury; and that plaintiff was guilty of negligence that barred her recovery; also, error is assigned to the giving of certain instructions and refusal of others.

Plaintiff, now defendant in error, contends that defendant company was negligent by placing a slippery liquid substance on the floor of its restaurant and permitting the floor to remain in a condition dangerous to plaintiff; by failing to place a warning sign showing the *284 dangerous condition of the floor; or to apprise plaintiff of the existence of such condition; by failing to take action to remove the substance from the floor and insure the safety thereof, as defendant knew, or should have known, the dangerous condition; that such carelessness and negligence was the sole proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury; that the injury was not caused by any contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff; and that the accident was not an unavoidable one.

There is little, if any, contradiction of the facts that are decisive of the issues here and in sum, they are not tedious or involved. Plaintiff entered defendant’s coffee shop shortly after it had been opened for the day’s business. She seated herself on a stool at the serving counter and shortly thereafter decided to move to another stool to her left. The seat of the stool was thirty inches from the floor and a ledge along the counter to enable persons getting onto and off the stools. The stool seat and its backrest rotated only one quarter turn in either direction. Plaintiff was a large and -rather heavy woman, sixty-one years old at the time. When in the a.ct of moving from one stool to another, she fell to the floor. She did not use the foot-counter ledge in attempting to get off the stool, but turned to her left and placed her right foot to the floor and in this, we might say awkward, position, her heel either slipped or there was a possibility, according to the testimony of physicians, that the contortion of her body caused a fracture of the neck of the femur, and a fall would thereby result.

The damp spot on the floor was approximately six inches in diameter and near the stool on which plaintiff was seated. There is nothing in the evidence that discloses how the damp spot occurred, or of what it was composed, and no evidence whatever as to how long the spot had been on the floor or what had occasioned it.

The evidence is undisputed that each night the floor of the coffee shop was mopped and cleaned with steel wool, and that there was a maid in- constant attendance to keep *285 the shop and its floor clean and free of debris. There is no evidence that the shop was not at all times in a clean and safe condition. The damp spot was not observed by plaintiff or anyone else until immediately after her fall. A witness who had just preceded plaintiff into the shop was seated on a stool to the left of plaintiff and near the place of the accident. He testified that he did not at any time notice any damp spot on the floor prior to the accident; and that it was more or less undiscernible. As before stated, plaintiff’s medical testimony was to the effect that it was equally probable that since plaintiff was an elderly person, the break of the neck of the femur was caused by the contortion of her body in the manner in which she attempted to remove herself from the seat, as it was from a fall to the floor.

In the light of the medical testimony elicited from plaintiff’s own witnesses, we have a situation where the evidence presents no more than an equal choice of probabilities, therefore it is not substantial to the end that plaintiff, having asserted negligence on the part of defendant, failed to meet the burden of proof thereof. There is no positive evidence as to the proximate cause of the injury, and the record is wholly void of any proof that the damp spot on the floor was placed there by defendant, or that it was there a sufficient length of time for defendant, in the exercise of ordinary care, to have known about it, or warn plaintiff of its presence if it had been noticeably hazardous. No one saw it prior to the accident; no one knows how it happened to. be there; and from the description given by all of the witnesses it was not such a danger as would have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care or to ■ charge defendant with the duty of discovery. Defendant was not bound to foresee or guard against casualties that are not expected in the ordinary course of events, or which might result from some unusual or peculiar act of plaintiff. Nothing is better settled in the law of negligence than that actual .or constructive knowledge on the part *286 of defendant of the defect or danger spot must be proven before liability attaches.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P.2d 257, 128 Colo. 281, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-dry-goods-co-v-pender-colo-1953.