Lane Drug Stores Inc. v. Brooks

29 S.E.2d 716, 70 Ga. App. 878, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 17, 1944
Docket30213.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 29 S.E.2d 716 (Lane Drug Stores Inc. v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane Drug Stores Inc. v. Brooks, 29 S.E.2d 716, 70 Ga. App. 878, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 128 (Ga. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinions

MacIntyre, J.

1. This suit was brought by Mrs. R. W. Brooks against Lane Drug Company as the occupant, and Connally Realty Company as the owner, of the premises. At the conclusion of the evidence, both defendants moved for a directed verdict, and the motion of Connally Realty Company, the owner of the premises,, was sustained on the purely legal ground that under the terms of its lease to Lane Drug Company, the latter had taken over complete possession and control of the premises, and had assumed full responsibility for maintaining the same in proper condition. The motion for a directed verdict in favor of Lane Drug Company was overruled, and the case was submitted to the jury on the question whether the latter was liable under the evidence adduced. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Lane Drug Company’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and it excepted.

*879 The material allegations of the petition may be stated briefly as follows: (1) That there were defects in the entrance-way to the' store occupied by the defendant Lane Drug Company, which rendered the same unsafe for use by the plaintiff and other persons lawfully upon the premises; (2) that the defendants had knowledge of the existence of these defects and permitted them to remain; (3) that the plaintiff, while lawfully upon the premises for the purpose of transacting business with Lane Drug Company, was injured as a result of said defects; and (4) that her injury was not due to her own failure to exercise ordinary care.

Lane Drug Company’s vice-president testified that at the time the drug company leased the premises there was no alcove or recess at the entrance in question; but that the drug company decided to recess the doors so as to create the alcove, and did so with its own foreman and workmen; that the floor of the alcove was formerly a part of the floor of the store, and when the doors were moved back the flooring was left as it was; that at the time Lane Drug Company took possession of the premises he noticed the depression or hole in the surface of the floor at the point where the alcove was to be constructed, but decided not to do anything about it, but just to leave it as it was. As a consequence, the depression remained within six inches of the step-down, and between 1939 and the date of the plaintiff’s injury, was gradually worn deeper and wider by persons walking in and out of the store. The manager of the store testified that he also had knowledge of the existence of the step-down, as well as of the depression, in advance of the date on which the plaintiff was injured.

It seems to us from the record that the only issue upon which there is a dispute is whether the plaintiff was injured as a proximate result of the defects in the entrance-way, or whether her injury was due to her own negligence, or to some other cause. The plaintiff, in her petition, alleged, and there was evidence from which the jury were authorized so to And, that her fall and injury occurred as follows: There was a step-up of’ three or four inches from the sidewalk to the alcove at the entrance to the store; that the plaintiff knew it was there; that she stepped up from the sidewalk to the alcove, and entered the store; that after making a purchase, she undertook to leave the premises through the main entrance fronting on Whitehall Street, one of the busiest thorough *880 fares in the down-town shopping district of Atlanta; that this entrance consisted of two swinging doors with solid baseboards of wood and metal extending from the bottom of the door to a height of approximately eighteen inches, and with glass panels above; that the exit or right-hand door, through which she undertook to pass, was hung on hinges so that when pushed it would swing outward and over the floor of the recessed alcove approximately three feet deep (the width of the door being only one-half inch less than the depth of the alcove) ; that she placed her right hand upon the-handle of this door, and stepping forward first with her right foot over the threshold, she pushed the door outward as far as possible; that due to the fact that numerous persons were standing-in the alcove, she could not open the door completely, and was forced to step slightly to the left and forward with her left foot;, that the step she made with her left foot was the first step she made after stepping outside and away.from the door; that in making this step, her left heel sank down into a worn place and depression approximately in the center of the tile floor, the said, depression and worn place being approximately eight inches wide-from front to back, and thirteen inches long from left to right, and. its sides sloping gradually from the edges to a maximum depth of approximately one-half inch; that the hole or depression was principally in a band of dark green tile, and the hole had worn completely through the tile and into-a dark cement bed underneath,, so that the hole was not distinguishable from the green tile surrounding it, except by a minute inspection; that the edge of the-hole nearest the exit door was only three and one-half inches from the center line of the alcove, and only twenty-one inches from the-threshold of the doors; that when opened, the right-hand door came within thirteen inches of the hole, so that a person taking a single step to the left and forward would easily step into the-depression, or some portion of it; that when her heel went down, into this depression she was thrown off balance, and she stepped forward quickly with her right foot in an effort to regain her equilibrium; that a short distance from this depression there was-, a curbing or step-down, which connected the alcove with the sidewalk, and the top surface of the alcove and curbing was approximately four inches above the level of the sidewalk; that this curbing was gray in color and indistinguishable from the gray side *881 walk to one who was caught in an emergency and plunging forward, as the plaintiff was; that as a result of the similarity in color of the curb and sidewalk, the plaintiff was unable to tell just where the curbing ended, and consequently her right foot came down partly on the curbing and partly over it, throwing her violently to the sidewalk. The evidence authorized the jury to find further that the depression or declivity into which the plaintiff’s let heel sank was not observable except on minute inspection, and no: only the plaintiff but a number of other witnesses, including the defendant’s own employees, testified that they had not observed the depression, although they had frequently walked in and out of the entrance-way prior to the plaintiff’s injury, some of them having used the entrance-way several times daily for many years. The evidence authorized the jury to find also that in addition to numerous persons standing in the entrance, in accordance with a custom well known to the defendant, the weather was dark and cloudy, which made it additionally difficult to detect the depression in the floor or the nearby step-down. The jury were authorized to find further that there was no light or other warning sign near the floor in the alcove to call attention to the depression and the step-down. The plaintiff testified in part, as follows: “As to whether I looked down at the floor to see where I was going — I don’t walk looking down at my feet. I do look down sometimes ahead of me to see where I ■ am going, just like other people, when I know there is something to step on or into or anything. Any public place, I just go along using this place . .

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E.2d 716, 70 Ga. App. 878, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-drug-stores-inc-v-brooks-gactapp-1944.