Griffin v. Demerjian
This text of 213 N.E.2d 384 (Griffin v. Demerjian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
These are the plaintiff’s exceptions to the direction of a verdict for the defendant in an action of tort for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on August 29, 1960, in the defendant’s variety store when her foot caught in a wire display rack behind the soda fountain.
The jury could have found as follows: There were five or six stools in front of the fountain and to its right was a window. The wire rack “in the form of latticework” extended from the window behind the right hand stool and half way to the next stool in a line parallel to the stools. The space between the rack and the right hand stool measured three to four inches. When the plaintiff entered the store all the stools were occupied except the one nearest the window. She observed that the rack came up “in . . . back of the stool” in the same position that she had observed when previously in the store. She “squeezed in between the woman on the second seat from the window *48 and the wire rack. ... In leaving . . . [she] turned to her left . . . [and] put her left foot back in order to get up . . . [and] caught her foot in the . . . rack and fell.” The evidence should have been submitted to the jury. They could have found negligence in the placing of the rack. The plaintiff was invited into a space from which she could not get out except at the risk of engagement with the latticework of the rack. It was not contributory negligence as a matter of law to use this customer space in response to the invitation and to leave it in the way described, regardless of whether the plaintiff had the position of the visible rack in mind, or should have. See Robicheau v. Supreme Mkts. Inc. 333 Mass. 608, 609-610. To the extent that O’Neil v. W. T. Grant Co. 335 Mass. 234, 235, states a different rule we decline to follow it.
Exceptions sustained.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
213 N.E.2d 384, 350 Mass. 47, 1965 Mass. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-demerjian-mass-1965.