Lander v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.

44 A.2d 886, 141 Me. 422, 1945 Me. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 20, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 886 (Lander v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lander v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 44 A.2d 886, 141 Me. 422, 1945 Me. LEXIS 35 (Me. 1945).

Opinion

Murchie, J.

This case, brought forward by plaintiff’s exceptions to the direction of a verdict for the defendant, presents the single issue whether a storekeeper is negligent in permitting customers to enter a store, having a floor which becomes slippery when weather conditions are such that water or moisture will be tracked in upon their footwear, without protecting them from the hazard of slipping by the use of mats or other materials under such circumstances or by keeping the floor dry through mopping. A wet floor inevitably results when customers in large numbers enter a store from the street when rain or snow is falling, or the ground outside is covered with melting snow. The facts with which we deal show that the plaintiff slipped and fell in defendant’s store in the early , afternoon of December 18,1943, the weather being mild, with snow, ice and. slush covering the highways and sidewalks which provided acr cess to the premises. Every customer who entered, including the plaintiff, must have tracked moisture into the store and onto its floor.

The allegations of negligence concerning which evidence was introduced are that the surface of the floor at the time the plaintiff was injured was wet, very slippery and unsafe; that it [424]*424was hazardous whenever water or moisture was permitted to rernain thereon; and that temporary mats or covers should have been provided under prevailing weather conditions, or arrangements made to keep the surface dry by mopping. Additional allegations, entirely unsupported by testimony, are that the floor was surfaced with “linoleum or other like smooth material”; that a “particular location” of the aisle where the plaintiff fell contributed to her fall; that the defendant or its servants knew, or ought to have known, of the hazard, in the exercise of due care; and that the duty of the defendant was “to see that the floors of its ... store were in a safe condition to be walked upon.”

The applicable law is established. It is stated with great clarity in an annotation covering more than 50 pages commencing at 100 A. L. R., 710, at page 711:

“The proprietor of a store or shop owes a duty to his invitees to exercise reasonable, ordinary, or due care to keep his premises reasonably safe for their use.”

This is consistent with the statement of the rule set forth in 38 Am. Jur. 754, Par. 96, and with many decided cases cited in the annotation aforesaid and in a footnote to that text. It has been declared the law in this jurisdiction. Thornton v. Maine State Agricultural Society, 97 Me., 108, 53 A., 979, 94 Am. St. Rep., 488; Graffam v. Saco Grange Patrons of Husbandry, 112 Me., 508, 92 A., 649, L. R. A., 1915 C632. A storekeeper is not held to insure his patrons against injury while on his premises. S. S. Kresge Co. v. Fader, 116 Oh. St. 718, 158 N. E., 174, 58 A. L. R., 132; Bader v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 112 N. J. L., 241; 169 A., 687. The distinction between his duty and that of an insurer was well drawn by Mr. Justice Farrington in Charpentier v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 130 Me., 423, 157 A., 238, when he said, in speaking of the duty of a railroad to its employees:

[425]*425“It does not. undertake to provide a reasonably safe . place i.., but it does undertake to use due care to do so, and that is the measure of its duty.”

The issue presented by the exceptions is the application of this law to the facts of the present case. Those facts can not be said to be in dispute although the evidence discloses conflicts of testimony as to whether the surface of the floor at the point where plaintiff fell was wet or dry, the exact location of that point, and whether plaintiff was passing it for the first time that day or had passed it once and was retracing her steps. In considering the propriety of a directed verdict all such conflicts must be resolved in the manner most favorable to the plaintiff. Howe v. Houde, 137 Me., 119, 15 A., 2d., 740; Barrettv. Greenall, 139 Me., 75, 27 A., 2d., 599; Jordan v. Maine Central Railroad Co., 139 Me., 99, 27 A., 2d., 811. We must pass upon the exceptions on the assumption that the jury would have found that the plaintiff fell where and as she deposed, while walking in the direction she asserted, and that the floor at that point was wet and slippery, but if the evidence viewed thus favorably would not warrant a jury finding that the defendant had not exercised “reasonable, ordinary, or due care to keep his premises reasonably safe” for the use of its customers, to repeat the essential language of the quotation from the A. L. B., annotation supra, it was proper for the Justice before whom the case was tried to direct a verdict for the defendant, as he did. Heath v. Jaquith, 68 Me., 433; Bennett v. Talbot, 90 Me., 229, 38 A., 112; Johnson v. Portland Terminal Co., 131 Me., 311, 162 A., 518; Scannell v. Mohican Market, 131 Me., 495, 160 A., 777. This principal is of general application. Hathaway v. Chandler and Co. Inc., 229 Mass., 92, 118 N. E., 273; Johnson v. Pulidy, 116 Conn., 443, 165 A., 355; S. S. Kresge Co. v. Fader, supra; 38 Am. Jur. 763, Par. 102. The propriety of a nonsuit ordered by the Court is tested in the same manner. Spickernagle v. C. S. Woolworth & Co., 236 Pa. St. 496, 84 A., 909, Ann. Cas. [426]*4261914 A., 132; Schnatterer v. Bamberger et al., 81 N. J. L., 558, 79 A., 324, 34 L. R. A., N. S., 1077, Ann. Cas. 1912 D., 139, 1 N.C.C.A., 669.

A jury might have found that the fact of plaintiff’s fall in the aisle of defendant’s store proved it was not a safe place, or even a reasonably safe place, for her unless it believed that the fall resulted from her own negligence in whole or in part. Whether the floor was in fact safe, or reasonably so, is not the issue, but rather whether the defendant is chargeable with negligence for a failure to use reasonable and ordinary or due care to that end. There is no complication resulting from the presence of some foreign substance other than moisture on the floors when it would be necessary to determine whether the proprietor knew of its presence or was chargeable with notice of it because of its presence for a sufficient period of time.

Plaintiff fell on a floor made slippery by water and melting snow and ice tracked thereon by customers entering the premises, as she did, to buy goods. That the floor was wet and slippery must be regarded as established since there is evidence to that effect which a jury might have accepted as true, notwithstanding testimony of opposite effect. There is no evidence however that the floor covering was linoleum or other like smooth material; that it was more slippery than store floors generally under the prevailing weather conditions, or that the defendant or its servants had knowledge of its condition prior to the time of the plaintiff’s fall. “For all that appears” in the evidence, to quote the California court in Neil v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association (Cal.), 104 P., 2d., 107, the plaintiff may have tracked into thé store the very moisture “which caused her to slip and fall.”

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 886, 141 Me. 422, 1945 Me. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lander-v-sears-roebuck-co-me-1945.