Gregson v. Big Bear Food Corp.

121 A.2d 325, 84 R.I. 34, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 23, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 A.2d 325 (Gregson v. Big Bear Food Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregson v. Big Bear Food Corp., 121 A.2d 325, 84 R.I. 34, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 16 (R.I. 1956).

Opinion

Flynn, C. J.

These two actions of the case for negligence were brought by a wife and her husband respectively to recover damages based upon personal injuries sustained by the wife from a fall allegedly caused by a foreign substance on the floor of the market owned and operated by the defendant corporation. After a trial in the superior court a jury rendered verdicts for Bernardine Gregson in the sum of $4,750 and for James Gregson in the sum of $500. Thereafter the trial justice denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial in the wife’s case and granted such a motion in the husband’s case unless he remitted all of his verdict in excess of $124. Such remittitur was filed and the cases are before us on defendant’s exceptions to the denial of its motions for an unconditional new trial in each case and to other rulings of the court during the trial.

The husband’s case depends on defendant’s liability to his wife and therefore we shall consider the evidence and rulings as if only the wife’s case were here, our decision however applying to both cases. In view of our final conclusion as to the motions for a new trial, we shall not discuss the evidence in detail.

[37]*37In general the testimony for plaintiff tended to show the following among other facts. On May 29, 1943 she was an invitee in the premises-of the Big Bear Market located at 795 Westminster street in the city of Providence. The market had been operated for some time by the defendant corporation, which had never been legally dissolved. Prior to the accident a Miss Berman had been defendant’s legal agent for service of process and no change in this respect had been made up to the time of trial.

According to plaintiff’s testimony she had made certain purchases and was walking along an aisle toward the rear of the store. At a point between the candy and butter counters she slipped and fell to the floor. After her fall she observed a brownish substance resembling a cutting or peeling from potatoes and also the marks of her shoe where it had scraped along the floor. An employee came from behind the butter counter, picked up the substance, and hurried with it toward the rear of the store.

Previously she had observed another employee at the potato counter dropping potato cuttings and peelings into a basket. He then dumped them into an overfilled basket on a platform truck, which had been brought by another to collect the debris or refuse. This truck was pushed by defendant’s employee up the aisle just ahead of plaintiff. Her son also testified that he saw some of the potato peelings or cuttings drop from the overloaded basket to the platform of the truck. There was no evidence of any substance on the floor before the truck had passed that point.

The medical evidence of plaintiff’s doctor indicated that she had sprained her left ankle in a fall elsewhere on May 4, 1943, some three weeks before she fell in the market; that after the present accident there were abrasions and some swelling on the left knee; and that her injuries were diagnosed as a sprained left knee and ankle. Diathermy treatments and manipulations continued until October 15, 1943.

[38]*38An orthopedist to whom plaintiff was referred by her doctor diagnosed her condition as traumatic arthritis of the left knee. However, he received a history from her showing that she fell in a store and reinjured the same left knee for which she already had been treating because of a previous fall in April 1943, and that no mention of injury to her left ankle was made to him.

A third doctor who, on defendant's request, examined plaintiff the day after her fall testified that he received from her a history which showed that she had been under the care of an “osteopathic” doctor for a previous injury to her left knee; that the knee was then swollen and only slightly tender; and that the fall of May 29 may have slightly aggravated her previous knee condition but not to any appreciable extent.

On the other hand the evidence for defendant tended to show that the defendant corporation had been petitioned into receivership in July 1940; that thereupon a new corporation, Wamsutta Realty Corporation, had been formed and had been operating the store before and at the time of the accident; and that therefore plaintiff had not established the allegation in her declaration that defendant was the owner and operator of. the market at the time of the accident. There was also testimony that the platform trucks were not used in the store until after the accident; that there was no cutting and peeling of potatoes as alleged since people would not buy them; and that no employee had picked up and carried away the alleged foreign substance.

The defendant first presses the exception to the denial of its motion for a directed verdict. In support thereof it is claimed substantially that the uncontradicted evidence shows that defendant corporation was not operating the market on May 29, 1943; that the Wamsutta Realty Corporation had been operating it after defendant's receivership and at the time of the accident; that the final decree in the [39]*39receivership of defendant corporation was entered December 4, 1941 showing all of the debts had been paid and leaving nothing further to be distributed; and that no annual report of such corporation, as required by general laws 1938, chapter 116, article III, §78 (a), had been filed in the office of the secretary of state from March 1940 to the time of trial.

In our opinion this contention considers the evidence most favorably to defendant and fails to view it most favorably to plaintiff, which is required on such a motion. Moreover it is not entirely uncontradicted, as defendant contends. According to the transcript the defendant corporation had never been legally dissolved. The receivership was brought to protect and not to dissolve the corporation and the final decree did not make such a dissolution. The mere failure to file an annual report after March 1940 would not in itself forfeit defendant’s charter or dissolve the corporation as of May 29, 1943.

That statute requires not only a failure to file for jour years next preceding the first day of March, but also the filing by the secretary of state of a certified list of all such delinquent corporations after the first day of March in each even year and the mailing of a certain notice to each corporation. The undisputed evidence shows that as of the date of the accident none of these steps had been taken. Moreover a witness from the office of the secretary of state testified that according to the records the defendant corporation had not been terminated.

All that is known of the Wamsutta Realty Corporation is gained from the testimony of Mrs. Hood, its president and treasurer. As the former Miss Berman, she and her present husband were managing operators of the market under the defendant corporation before the receivership. Both remained in that location after the receivership; both continued to operate the market; and no change, because of the receivership, in operating conditions as they affected [40]*40the public appears in evidence. Whether Wamsutta Realty Corporation was a mere holding corporation for the leasing of the premises, and in any event whether it or defendant was in fact operating the market on May 29, 1943, were questions to be determined by the jury from the conflicting evidence.

The defendant also argues that there was no evidence showing it had constructive notice of the dangerous condition on its floor.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A.2d 325, 84 R.I. 34, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregson-v-big-bear-food-corp-ri-1956.