Fisher v. Sears

196 So. 2d 563, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5697
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1967
DocketNo. 2511
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 196 So. 2d 563 (Fisher v. Sears) 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
Fisher v. Sears, 196 So. 2d 563, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5697 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall F. Walters, filed this suit against the defendant, Sears, Roebuck and Company, endeavoring to recover on behalf of Mrs. Walters the sum of $5,000.00 for personal injuries sustained as the result of having slipped and fallen in the passageway of Sears department store and on behalf of Mr. Walters for medical expenses incurred and anticipated by him as a result of his wife’s injuries the sum of $854.73.

The defendant answered denying the foregoing accusations of negligence and in [565]*565the alternative it pleaded the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, Mrs. Walters.

From a judgment in favor of Mrs. Walters in the amount of $1,500.00 and in favor of her husband for $274.54, the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.

The record reveals that on July 22, 1964, at approximately 1:45 P.M., Mrs. Walters entered the toy department of Sears store located in the Gentilly Woods Shopping Center in the City of New Orleans. She was accompanied by her three-year-old daughter and a son eighteen months of age. They had walked three or four paces when the plaintiff’s three-year-old daughter suddenly slipped and fell, striking the back of her head on the terrazzo floor. The plaintiff immediately released her son’s hand and rushed to the asistance of her daughter when she too slipped and fell striking her back and hips. It was later discovered that the cause of the accident was a clear greasy substance which had been spilled upon the terrazzo floor in the passageway of the toy department.

The incident was reported to the clerk of an adjoining department, and she referred the plaintiff and her child to the defendant’s nurse. The nurse then arranged for the plaintiff to be examined by Doctors Houston, Roy and Faust, and she went to their offices immediately. Thereafter, the plaintiff visited her family physician and was treated by him.

Counsel for the defendant informed us during the oral argument hereof that he does not question the amount of the judgment awarded to the plaintiffs herein, and he has likewise conceded that a clear, greasy substance was on the terrazzo floor when the plaintiff’s accident occurred.1 However, he insists that the record fails to disclose that the substance remained on the floor for a sufficient length of time so as to amount to constructive notice thereof and that the burden of proof rests upon the plaintiff to establish this essential fact.

The facts inscribed in the record clearly disclose that Mrs. Walters was caused to fall by virtue of a clear, greasy substance which had been spilled or was otherwise present on the terrazzo floor in the aisle or passageway of the toy department and that the substance was there without the actual knowledge of the defendant or any of its employees.

When the plaintiff fell at 1:45 P.M., the toy department had been unattended for at least 45 minutes, since the clerk assigned to it was absent during her lunch hour which began at approximately 1:00 o’clock and a clerk in an adjoining department was requested to service this department as well as her own.2

The defendant has endeavored to exculpate itself from negligence by explaining that a system of inspection existed for the purpose of discovering deleterious and foreign substances on the floors of its store. In substantiation thereof, it offered the laboriously vague testimony of Peter Sampson, an employee of eight years duration and chief porter of the Gentilly Woods store, who related when questioned under both direct and cross examination under the act, that the floors are swept every morning and that one-sixth thereof was mopped every day. On this day, the floor had been swept but not mopped. He said that a [566]*566regular system of inspection was maintained by one of the six porters on duty and that each aisle was regularly inspected every fifteen minutes; however, on the day of this accident, he did not make any such rounds, and he did not remember which of the porters had been assigned to the toy department. It is of interest to note, in this connection, that none of the other porters were called by the defendant. It taxes our credulity to believe that neither the defendant nor its head porter, Peter Sampson, knew which one of six or seven porters had been assigned to the toy department especially since a claim for personal injury was imminent from the inception of the accident.

In any event, Sampson, very significantly, asserted that the porters were kept quite busy on other projects during the day, and at this particular time, he thought he had been moving washing machines from one location in the store to another; that the porter in charge of the toy department on this day was subject to call to move furniture or do other chores in the area. Despite his testimony that an inspection was made by the porter on duty every 15 minutes, he related that each porter was assigned to eight departments to clean and care for them during the day.

It is also of interest to note that Mrs. George Steffin, the employee who was charged with supervision of the garden department and toy department while the clerk in the toy department was absent for lunch, testified that when a foreign substance was spilled on the floor or something was otherwise placed in a position to endanger patrons, she had been instructed to call “up” to obtain a porter to remove the substance. Similar testimony also emanated from Sidney Welch, an assistant floor manager of the store. He asserted that routine inspections were made by the porters, but he was unable to estimate the time interval between these inspections. Moreover, he also indicated that the porters are in fact on call and must clean up substances only when requested to do so by the clerks iru charge of the various departments.

In the final analysis, the only two questions posed for our consideration by virtue-of the foregoing contentions and the evidence adduced herein are ones of fact and" they are: (A) The record does not reflect, that the defendant possessed actual knowledge of the condition which caused the-plaintiff’s injuries; hence, we are relegated to answering the question of whether the-record discloses evidence of the fact that the condition complained of had existed for a sufficient .length of time so as to constitute constructive notice thereof and to-reasonably justify the inference that the defendant had failed to exercise ordinary care in the removal of the substance from the-customer’s passageway, and (B) whether the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory-negligence as would act as a bar to her recovery herein.

No presumption of fault arises-from the mere fact of injury to a customer,, and, in a suit for damages growing out of such an injury, the plaintiff must prove-with that certainty required by law, that the-injury was caused by the negligence of the-storekeeper or one of its employees.

It must be conceded, without equivocation, that a clear or transparent,, greasy substance upon the terrazzo floor of the passageway of a department store is potentially dangerous to the patrons thereof, but actual or constructive notice of its presence must be proven before the proprietor may be held responsible for the injury which it caused. The owner of a business-establishment is not the insurer of the safety of his customers and owes to invitees and business patrons the use of ordinary care in the maintenance thereof.

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199 So. 2d 182 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 2d 563, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-sears-lactapp-1967.