Lewis v. W. T. Grant Co.

129 F. Supp. 805, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3606
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1955
DocketCiv. A. No. 718
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 F. Supp. 805 (Lewis v. W. T. Grant Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. W. T. Grant Co., 129 F. Supp. 805, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3606 (S.D.W. Va. 1955).

Opinion

WATKINS, District Judge.

Plaintiff, a married woman, 63 years of age, was very seriously injured when she slipped and fell while walking in the store of W. T. Grant Company at Huntington, W. Va., to which she had come as a customer to purchase merchandise. Plaintiff produced evidence to show that on the morning of the accident, just before the store opened, and a short time before the plaintiff fell, the defendant had covered a part of its floor with a liquid substance which left the floor oily and slick and that when she stepped on the slick floor she slipped and fell. The jury awarded her a verdict of $17,172. Defendant has moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial. In its brief defendant confines its argument to the motion for a new trial, contending (1) that the court erred in the admission of certain evidence; (2) that the verdict is excessive, and (3) that the court erred in questioning some of the witnesses.

There was an abundance of evidence as to negligence and the defendant does not now urge its insufficiency, relying upon the points mentioned above. However, to understand the three grounds relied upon by defendant it is necessary to review the evidence of the plaintiff, which was evidently accepted by the jury in reaching its verdict. That evidence is as follows:

Plaintiff went to the store on April 20, 1953, as a customer, entering the store at 9:30 A.M. when the store was opened for customers. She went to different parts of the store, including the second floor where she made a purchase. She was leaving the store about 10:30 A.M., walking through the east aisle on the first floor when both of her feet slipped from under her and she fell and sustained very serious injuries. On the morning of the accident, just before the store opened for business, the defendant had covered the particular portion of its floor near the east front door, at the place where plaintiff fell, with a preparation which left the floor oily and slick. The floor of the store was oak, and about [807]*807each three months a preserving material was applied to the front part of the store and in the front part of the aisles where there was most traffic. The material applied to the floor by the defendant on the morning that plaintiff fell was called acrosheen. The use of it was somewhat new to the defendant in that it had been used by defendant only once before, that being in January, about three months prior to the date of this accident. It was a liquid substance and was applied to the floor by defendant with a mop.

On the morning of the accident defendant’s janitor came to the store about 8 A.M. and by the time the store opened for business at 9:30 A.M. the janitor had swept and cleaned the floor and applied the substance to the front part of the store, and to the east aisle (where plaintiff fell), back from the front of the store twelve to fifteen feet.

Shirley Smith, a window trimmer, and one Colapietro, the assistant store manager, were working in the front of the store. Shortly after 10:00 A.M., before plaintiff fell, Mabel C. Hall and Mrs. A. T. Runyon, her sister, both customers, entered the front door of the store. Mrs. Hall had only taken three to four steps inside the store when she slipped and fell upon the substance. This occurred about twenty to thirty minutes before the plaintiff fell. Mrs. Hall had polio some fifty years prior to this date and wore a brace. Although she walked with a limp she was able to do all her own housework, walk about town, do her own shopping and operate a grocery store. When Mrs. Hall fell to the floor the window trimmer, her sister, and the assistant store manager helped her get up and put her in a chair nearby. Mrs. Hall testified that there was something like oil on the top of the floor and that was what caused her foot to slip and fall. She was not sure that she could get up, and sat there in the chair while papers were being prepared by defendant’s employees for her to sign. After she fell no attempt was made to mop up the substance on the floor or to block off traffic. After she fell she noticed oil on the bottom of her shoes, which had not been there before.

While Mrs. Hall was seated in the chair and the assistant store manager was filling out papers for her to sign, another customer in the store whose name is not known, slipped at approximately the same spot where plaintiff later slipped and fell, and within five or six feet from where Mrs. Hall had slipped and fallen. This occurred in the presence of the assistant store manager and the window trimmer who were standing beside Mrs. Hall and her sister, Mrs. Runyon, not more than six feet from where the unknown woman slipped. When Mrs. Runyon saw the unknown woman slip she said to the two Grant employees, “Oh, that woman there almost fell”, or words to that effect. Out of an abundance of precaution this evidence as to the slipping of the unknown woman at the same spot where plaintiff later fell, and the statement of Mrs. Runyon to the store employees calling attention to the incident, was admitted for the sole purpose of showing further notice to the store employees of the dangerous condition of the floor. The incident occurred just a few minutes after Mrs. Hall had fallen.

After Mrs. Hall had fallen and the unknown woman had slipped, and while Mrs. Hall was still seated in the chair, nearby, the plaintiff came walking down the east aisle from the rear of the store toward the front of the store. No notice or warning was given to her as to the dangerous condition of the floor. When she reached a point about five or six feet from where Mrs. Hall had fallen, both of her feet slipped out from under her and she fell on her back. Mrs. Hall and Mrs. Runyon both testified that the floor was oily at the place where plaintiff fell and where she lay on the floor! Mrs. Runyon did not see the plaintiff fall because she was in the basement, but when she came up a few minutes later she saw plaintiff on the floor covered with a blanket and observed the condition of the floor at that time. The evidence showed that the plaintiff had not been moved from the place where she fell [808]*808and there is no evidence that the condition of the floor had changed. Although Mrs. Hall was seated only five or six feet away from the place where plaintiff fell she did not actually see the fall. She heard plaintiff fall and heard her scream and stood up and observed the condition of the floor. Mrs. Hall testified that where she fell the floor was as “slick as glass” and that it was “practically the same” five or six feet away where plaintiff fell.

Shirley Smith, defendant’s window trimmer, testified that she was working in the front of the store when both Mrs. Hall and the plaintiff slipped and fell; that she saw the plaintiff fall; that she observed the condition of the floor at the “spot” where plaintiff fell prior to her fall and found it to be “slick”; that “something had been put on the floor to clean it or something”; that she was not concerned herself about slipping because she was wearing tennis shoes. She testified that as plaintiff came by the candy counter her right foot slipped on the floor; that she tried to grab the candy counter but failed to do so and fell to the floor; that she did not see any foreign substance on the floor such as a banana peeling or otherwise where plaintiff fell; and that she was standing beside the chair in which Mrs. Hall was seated when plaintiff fell, about four feet away from where plaintiff fell. After the plaintiff fell, they did not move her for a while but put a blanket over her until an ambulance came and she was taken to the hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 F. Supp. 805, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-w-t-grant-co-wvsd-1955.