Kane v. Stuckey's of Thornburg, Inc.

50 Va. Cir. 247, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 415
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1999
DocketCase No. CL97-53
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Va. Cir. 247 (Kane v. Stuckey's of Thornburg, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kane v. Stuckey's of Thornburg, Inc., 50 Va. Cir. 247, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 415 (Va. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

By Judge William H. Ledbetter, Jr.

In this slip-and-fall case, the defendant property owner asks the court to set aside a juiy verdict in favor of its invitee.

Facts

On March 27,1994, the plaintiff, Kane, stopped at Stuckey’s, a restaurant and gift shop owned by the defendant near 1-95 in Spotsylvania County. Before making purchases, she went to the restroom. Leaving the restroom, she slipped and fell, hitting her head on a baby changer and sustaining other injuries.

Although the rescue squad, was summoned, Kane declined to go to the hospital by ambulance. Instead, she was taken to the emergency room by the restaurant manager and his wife. After being treated, she was taken back to the restaurant where she got her car and drove home.

Later, she experienced a variety of symptoms. She has been extensively treated and, according to her evidence, is diagnosed as having a permanent, debilitating condition caused by the accident.

The women’s restroom in Stuckey’s actually consists of two rooms. An outer room contains a counter with lavatories; a baby changer; a chair; and a trash can. The floor is tile. According to Kane, the floor was “shiny,” but the lighting in that room was poor. In an interior room, reached through a [248]*248doorway or portal, several individual stalls are located along one wall. The lighting in that area was brighter than in the lavatory area, according to Kane. The floor in that area is tile but of a slightly different pattern and elevation than the floor in the lavatory area.

Kane testified that the floor was dry when she went into the restroom. Her testimony was confirmed by the restaurant manager, who said that he inspected the restroom shortly before Kane arrived and found nothing amiss.

Kane walked through the lavatoiy room into the interior room and used a stall there. While in the stall, she heard someone in the lavatoiy room, but she could not say who the person was or what the person was doing. Kane was in the stall about five or six minutes.

Upon leaving the stall, she walked through the interior room, through the doorway that separates the two rooms, and slipped and fell as she stepped into the lavatory area.

According to Kane, the floor of the lavatory room was wet, as if it had been recently mopped. Ester Menard, a customer who went into the restroom and found Kane lying on the floor, testified that the vestibule area outside the restroom and the floor of the lavatory room in the restroom were “very wet.” She described the wetness as if the floor had just been mopped in a circular manner without wringing out the mop. She said that Kane’s clothes were wet. Brenda Ramsey, an emergency medical technician who responded with the rescue squad, testified that the floor was extremely wet. She said she got her shoes wet and left marks on the floor as she left the restroom.

All of the witnesses testified that there were no warning signs, warning cones, or barriers in the restroom or anywhere in the area.

Robert Kemstein, the restaurant manager, testified that he inspected the restroom shortly before the incident and found the floor diy. He further testified that the floor was dry after the incident except for some water that may have dripped on the floor while Kane was being treated. Marsha O’Dell, a store employee, testified that she saw no appreciable quantity of water on the floor after the incident.

O’Dell also testified that she saw no one mopping the floor before the incident.

There was mopping equipment in the restaurant. Menard testified that after she found Kane lying on the restroom floor, she went to the front of the restaurant and told the manager that the restroom floor was wet and that someone had fallen there. She said that the manager went to another area of the restaurant to get someone who was mopping there to go to the restroom, clean it up, and put up a wet floor sign.

[249]*249The evidence regarding Kane’s injuries was similarly conflicting. Kane’s medical witnesses said that her present condition, as well as all of the medical problems that she had experienced since the fall, were caused by the injuries sustained in the fall. Stuckey’s medical evidence contradicted Kane’s claims both as to causation and as to the severity of her present symptoms,

At the conclusion of a three-day trial, the court instructed the jury with regard to principles of primary negligence and contributory negligence applicable to the case. The jury returned a verdict for Kane.

Decision

A. Primary Negligence

A business owner has the duty to use ordinary care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for an invitee’s use consistent with the invitation. Further, it has the duty to warn an invitee of any unsafe condition which it knows or by the use of ordinaiy care should know about, except that it has no duty to warn of a condition that is open and obvious. The business owner is not a guarantor of an invitee’s safety. See 13B M.J., Negligence, § 18; Friend, Personal Injury Law in Virginia, § 16.4 (2d ed. 1998).

Specific to cases involving foreign substances on the floor, if an ordinary prudent person, given the facts and circumstances the business owner knew or should have known, could have foreseen the risk of danger resulting from such circumstances, the business owner has a duty to exercise reasonable care to avoid the genesis of the danger. Memco Stores v. Yeatman, 232 Va. 50 (1986).

Stuckey’s argues that Kane failed to prove negligence. The basis for that argument is that no one saw a Stuckey’s employee mopping the restroom floor.

Negligence can be proven by circumstantial evidence as well as by direct evidence. Jurors are entitled to use their common sense, and they may draw reasonable inferences from facts adduced.

Kane testified that the floor was dry when she entered the restroom. In a roundabout way, Kemstein confirmed that assertion. Kane testified that she was in a restroom stall for about five or six minutes, during which time she heard someone in the other portion of the restroom. Kane’s evidence established that there was mopping equipment in the restaurant and there were employees who did such chores present in the restaurant at the time. Kane further testified that when she exited the stall area and went into the outer portion of the restroom, she slipped and fell. Once she was on the floor, she [250]*250discovered that the floor was very wet, as if it had just been mopped. That the floor was very wet, as if it had just been mopped, was confirmed by two independent witnesses who arrived on the scene shortly after Kane fell.

Although Stuckey’s presented witnesses whose testimony conflicted with Kane’s evidence regarding the condition of the floor after her fall, the jury was entitled to believe Kane’s evidence on that point. Accepting Kane’s evidence, the jury then was entitled to infer that a Stuckey’s employee had mopped the floor of the outer portion of the restroom while Kane was in a stall, leaving the tile floor extremely wet. The jury also could use its common sense and collective human experience, as well as the evidence before it, to reason that wet bathroom tile can be extremely slippery.

Under the facts of this case, drawing such inferences does not amount to speculation or conjecture.

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Related

Beale v. King, Administratrix
132 S.E.2d 476 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1963)
Memco Stores, Inc. v. Yeatman
348 S.E.2d 228 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
50 Va. Cir. 247, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kane-v-stuckeys-of-thornburg-inc-vaccspotsylvani-1999.