Dill v. Holt's Sporting Goods Store

323 S.W.2d 644, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1959
Docket13330
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 644 (Dill v. Holt's Sporting Goods Store) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dill v. Holt's Sporting Goods Store, 323 S.W.2d 644, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

WERLEIN, Justice.

This suit was brought by appellants, James V. Dill and wife, against W. A. Holt Company, to recover damages resulting from alleged injuries suffered by Mrs. Dill when she fell down the stairway in Holt’s Sporting Goods Store in Houston. At the conclusion of appellants’ testimony, the Trial Court, upon motion of appellee, withdrew the case from the jury and rendered judgment that appellants take nothing. From the Court’s judgment appellants have perfected their appeal.

Appellants’ Point of error asserts that the Court erred in withdrawing the case from the jury and rendering judgment that appellants take nothing, because the evidence raised issues of fact for the jury as to the presence of a slippery substance on the stairway, the negligence of appellee in causing such condition, and such negligence being the proximate cause of appellants’ damages.

It thus becomes necessary to examine the testimony in order to determine whether the Trial Court erred in withdrawing the case from the jury and rendering judgment against appellants.

*645 Mrs. Dill testified she arrived at appel-lee’s store around just before 9:30 a. m.; that the sidewalk between the curb and the store was dry; that she walked to the rear of the store and then up the stairway in question, which consisted of eleven steps, to discuss a bill with appellee’s credit manager whose office was on the mezzanine floor; that the store floor did not look like it had been recently waxed; that the stairway was well lighted and the condition of the stairway was perfectly open and obvious to her; that as she walked up the stairway she was looking at the stairs where she was stepping and the stairway appeared to be clean; she supposed it looked like it had been recently cleaned; she did not see any foreign substance on the stairway and did not remember stepping in anything that seemed slippery in going up the stairway; that she remained in Mr. Vykykal’s office 9 to 12 minutes and then proceeded down the stairway; that she did not remember seeing any trash or debris on the stairway, and did not see any kind of oily substance; that in going up the stairway she did not use the handrail, but coming down she did; that when she was going down the stairs and trying to be cautious, as she got “middleways of the fourth or fifth step” her right foot slipped on something slippery, a slippery substance, a greasy substance, and she slipped and fell on her back; that she felt something slippery under her foot; that her foot hit something slippery and she fell; that she did not look at the steps after she fell and at no time saw any foreign substance of any kind thereon.

At the trial appellants introduced in evidence a light short coat which Mrs. Dill testified she was wearing at the time of the accident. It was pointed out that there was a greasy spot about the center of the back of the coat and also on the underside of the left sleeve of the coat, such spots being irregular but approximately several inches in diameter. She further testified that the coat had not been cleaned since the accident and that the spots were not on the coat at the time she entered appellee’s store; that later, on the afternoon of the day of the accident, she noticed some kind of a waxy or oily or greasy substance on her right shoe which she said smelt like wax. In her deposition she testified that the spots on the coat looked like an oily substance but smelt waxy. It was not shown whether the spots might have gotten on the coat while Mrs. Dill was in the ambulance that took her to the hospital, or while she was in the emergency or x-ray rooms of the hospital. There were apparently more than two spots on the coat, but appellants seemed to rely only on the two spots above mentioned as corroborative of their contention.

Robert Dill, brother of appellant, James V. Dill, testified that he and Mrs. Dill arrived at the store between 9 and 9:15 a. m.; that after taking Mrs. Dill to the store, he sat in the car which he had parked for about an hour; that he then went to the store and looked around to see if he could find Mrs. Dill, and, failing to find her on the first floor, he went up the stairway where the offices were; that after he had gotten about midway up the stairway and was lifting his right foot above his left foot, it slipped on some oily substance and slid back onto the step just below; that he hesitated and looked down to see what had happened and noticed on the stairway an oily substance which looked like gun oil; that it was dirty and streaky and irregular; that there were two places where the oil was on the step and one spot was separated from the other, and the oil appeared to be tracked; that he had not seen the oily substance before he stepped into it, but after looking directly down he could see it when he looked right at it; that he did not report the incident or the condition of the step to anyone in the store; that later in the evening of the day the accident occurred he went to the hospital and looked at the coat Mrs. Dill had worn and saw the spots that were on it; that the oil he saw on the coat appeared to be the same type of oil he saw on the stairway that morning; *646 that he also looked at his own shoe and saw some oil on the bottom of his right shoe.

Mr. Cott, the office manager of the store, testified that he had arrived at the store about 8 o’clock in the morning and had gone up to his office on the mezzanine floor; that by force of habit he observed the floor, the floor of the steps and the office to see if the porter had everything clean; that he saw nothing on any of the steps and that the stairway was clean; that the porter who generally cleaned the stairway was sick; that it was the practice in such case to redelegate the work to other porters; that he knew of his own knowledge that the floor had been swept the morning of the accident; that no compound had been put on the floors for some 10 or 11 days prior to the accident; that he did not observe any foreign substance of any kind on the stairway or any kind of slippery or slick substance thereon; that he had been up and down the stairway several times before Mrs. Dill fell; that when Mrs. Dill fell he went down the stairway and did not observe anything on the stairway that would cause a person to slip; that no cleaning fluid or oil was kept on the mezzanine; that there was also a lay-away department on the mezzanine where packages were sometimes kept or stored; and that if any gun was placed in storage in the lay-away on the mezzanine it would be wrapped in paper.

■ Accepting the evidence and the inferences therefrom in their aspects most favorable to appellants’ case, and discarding all contrary evidence and inferences, as we must do, we have concluded that there was some evidence that oil or some greasy substance was on the stairway at the time Mrs. Dill fell. Triangle Motors of Dallas v. Richmond, 152 Tex. 354, 258 S.W.2d 60.

There is, however, a total absence of evidence as to how the oil or greasy or waxy substance got on the stairway, or who placed or left it there, or how long it had 'remained there. Appellants failed to show that appellee had any notice that there was any foreign substance of any kind on the stairway, or that it was present on the stairway for any appreciable length of time or for such length of time that appellee, in the exercise of ordinary care, would have discovered its presence.

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323 S.W.2d 644, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dill-v-holts-sporting-goods-store-texapp-1959.