H. F. Hohlt Co. v. Routt

48 S.W.2d 386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1932
DocketNo. 9643.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 48 S.W.2d 386 (H. F. Hohlt Co. v. Routt) 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
H. F. Hohlt Co. v. Routt, 48 S.W.2d 386 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

■ Pursuant to a jury’s verdict on special issues, the defendants in error, Mr. and Mrs. Routt, between them, were awarded a total of $12,700 damages against the plaintiff in error, a private corporation of Brenham, Tex., as for its negligent failure to “use that degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence would have used under the same or similar circumstances-to keep the floors of its place of business in a reasonably safe condition for persons lawfully thereon as invitees,” which dereliction proximately caused Mrs. Routt, while in such capacity walking over them, to fall and receive serious bodily injuries, she being at the same time acquitted of any contributory negligence.

Inveighing in this court against that adverse determination below, the corporation urges: First, that the evidence heard failed as a matter of law to even raise an issue of liability on its part for Mrs. Routt’s hurts; second, that procedural errors — all reversible in nature — were committed upon the trial in each of these particulars, (1) in generally charging the jury, the cause having been submitted on special issues, that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiffs to prove their allegations of negligence and damages, if any, by a preponderance of the evidence, and upon the defendant to likewise prove its aver-ments of contributory negligence; (2) in submitting special issue No. 1, inquiring: “Was the defendant, H. F. Hohlt Company, negligent in failing to use that degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence would have used under the same or similar circumstances to keep the floors of its place of business in a reasonably safe condition for persons lawfully thereon as invitees?” over the objection, among others, that “such issue is a charge upon the weight of the evidence and assumes that defendant did fail to use the care there referred to, and only submits the query as to whether such failure was negligence, when as a matter of law it would be negligence”; (3) in submitting special issue No. 2, asking, “Was such negligence (that inquired about in issue number 1) the proximate cause of the injury, if any, sustained by plaintiff, Mrs. Lulu Routt,” and in presenting in connection therewith a definition of proximate cause, which told the jury that “the test of whether an act may be deemed the proximate cause * * * is simply whether in the light of all the attending circumstances, the injury * * * ought to have been anticipated as a consequence of such act.”

The first contention is overruled. It uncontrovertedly appeared that Mrs. Routt was not only a patron in the store on this occasion — hence was due the use of ordinary care on the merchant’s part toward keeping the floors therein' reasonably safe for her accommodation as such, Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Monroe, 237 Ky. 60, 34 S.W.(2d) 929; Majestic Theater Co. v. Lutz, 210 Ky, 92, 275 S. W. 16; Laurie Company v. McCullough, 174 Ind. 477, 90 N. E. 1014, 92 N. E. 337; Bennett v. Railway, 102 U. S. 577, 26 L. Ed. 235 — but that she fell on and to the ground floor near the center of the building through her foot having slipped or skidded out from under her for a distance of near 24 inches and plainly marked the floor, at a place where it was dark or poorly lighted, suffering in consequence serious bodily injuries. This same floor had been there in use for 10 or 12 years, during the whole of which time the company had used on it once a day a preparation or compound known as “floor-sweep,” which had been put on about two hours before Mrs. Routt so fell, and had in addition been oiling it since about 1914, having within the 15 years immediately preceding this accident oiled or greased it all over about three or four times, the last one being at least a year prior, so that at this time it was very clean and had a highly polished finish.

There was further testimony to the effect:

That the sweeping compound kept the dust down, after the infrequent oilings or greas-ings had been made, as above detailed. That it also had a tendency to dampen the floor, at least for a brief time after being put on. Some of it in use in the store at the time of the trial was produced and offered in evidence in a paper sack it had been in approximately 10 minutes, when one of the company’s firm members said of it: “That would make grease on your hand; yes, but after it is on the ground, or on the floor, it gets dry.” The same witness further said: “They (customers) slip, yes, they slip anywhere. They make a misstep sometime and slip, or have a loose heel sometime slip. As to my knowledge of anybody slipping and other people slipping in the store, I didn’t see them — I saw them slip. They didn’t fall; they make a misstep and slip. That can happen anytime. As to whether I have known them to slip in the store. Slip but don’t fall. I could not mention names. I have seen girls sometime make a slip like they would fall but they didn’t fall.”

Mrs. Routt testified: “I went in shopping and I left one counter to go to the other side of the store, and in going down the store my foot slipped on the floor and I fell and struck my hip. * * * I fell' because I slipped. To explain how it happened: I was walking down the store and my foot just slipped right out from under me, it skidded, and I could not re *388 gain my balance and I fell on that hip and broke that hip. As to whether there was anything that called my attention to the slipping, how my foot slipped — to detail how that accident happened: I am sure it was from the grease spot on the floor. What 'makes me believe that is from the way I slipped.”

Another lady customer in the store at the time testified: “I could see the mark on the floor very plainly where she had slipped. * * * I did not see anything on the floor to have caused Mrs. Routt to fall other than the polish finish on the floor.”

While there was no direct evidence that the place in the floor where the fall occurred was then actually slippery and dangerous, that was not an unwarrantable deduction from all the facts and circumstances before the jury, its age and highly polished state, as well as the long-continued use thereon of the two substances that probably both contained grease, being admitted; in other words, it was one of those inferences they might legitimately draw from what was before them, as was also the further one that such a condition co.uld both have been previously known to and remedied by the store company through its due exercise of the precautions an ordinarily prudent person would have used in the same circumstances looking toward the reasonable safety of customers expected to walk over it.

Neither the averments nor the evidence restricted the reaches of the cause of action as alleged and prosecuted to the existence of a particular grease spot on the floor, as opposing arguments urged; rather must it be regarded, as against only the general demurrer preserved here against it, as grounded upon the comprehensive charge that the floor in general, and especially in the area where Mrs. Routt fell, had negligently, through the above-stated manner of its maintenance, been permitted to be, become and remain slippery, greasy, or oily, and dangerous to walk upon, the particular place of the fall having also been so dark and poorly lighted at the time that she could not see, or discover, such dangerous and slippery condition. While not even Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-f-hohlt-co-v-routt-texapp-1932.