Millsaps v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.

327 So. 2d 554, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 3287
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1976
DocketNo. 7046
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 327 So. 2d 554 (Millsaps v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millsaps v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 327 So. 2d 554, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 3287 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinions

SCHOTT, Judge.

Plaintiff has appealed from a dismissal of her suit for damages for injuries she sustained in a fall at an A&P Food Store in New Orleans at about one o’clock in the afternoon on October 18, 1973. Defendant is the liability insurer of the store. The trial judge gave the following reasons for judgment:

“The law is clear that a storekeeper is not an insurer of his invitees, and negligence on the part of the storekeeper must be shown in order for plaintiff to recover. The Court is of the opinion that plaintiff in the instant case has failed to prove, by the preponderance of the evidence necessary for her to have done in order to recover, that there was any negligence on the part of the defendant’s insured.”

Plaintiff testified that she was pushing a shopping cart along an aisle when she slipped in a clear liquid substance which a store employee later found to be water. She said it was a puddle about 12 by 8 inches in size.

Her fourteen year old daughter, Myra, who was with plaintiff corroborated this testimony. The girl said that she had not seen this puddle before her mother fell.

Jesse Aucoin, the manager of the store, was not in the store at the time but he described the cleanup procedures as follows: A safety captain or an assistant inspects the store three or four times daily; another employee sweeps the floor three or four times daily; these employees enter the time of their inspections and sweepings on a log; each employee is instructed to clean [555]*555up anything he sees on the floor. Aucoin identified the log for the week ending October 20, showing inspections on the day in question at 10:15 AM and 12:45 PM, and sweepings at 8:45 and 11:30 AM. Ac- . cording to Aucoin, the employees who signed the log as inspector and sweeper on the day of the accident are no longer connected with the store and their whereabouts are unknown.

Gene Mayeaux, a stock clerk in the store on the day of the accident, testified as follows: He did not see plaintiff fall but shortly thereafter he found plaintiff sitting on the floor in an aisle between shelves of canned goods; he helped her up and found a spot of water about four inches in diameter; he also noticed that the back of her dress was wet; the floor was otherwise clean and he found nothing in the way of broken bottles in the area; after the accident he had an employee mop and clean up the spot. Mayeaux testified that plaintiff told him she fell after she caught her foot in the shopping cart. According to May-eaux, the store was swept every two hours.

Juanita Cipriano, the bookkeeper at the store, testified that when she got the report of plaintiff’s fall, which she did not see, she went to plaintiff and found her already standing; she saw water about the size of a grapefruit on the floor and a spot on the back of her dress; plaintiff told her she had caught her foot in the cart. On cleanup procedures, Miss Cipriano said' that the store is swept several times a day and the place where plaintiff fell had been swept 45 minutes .to an hour before she fell. She personally verified that the inspections and sweepings entered on the log were made and she signed the log as safety captain of the store.

In Kavlich v. Kramer, 315 So.2d 282 (La.1975) the Court reviewed the principles that the storekeeper owes an affirmative duty in the use of his premises to exercise reasonable care to keep the aisles, passageways and floors in a safe condition, and that this duty includes a reasonable effort to keep objects off of the floor which might give rise to a slip and fall. The Court found that Mrs. Kavlich slipped on a small piece of banana just inside the store’s entrance. Noting that she was in no position to know the circumstances under which the substance got there or to prove that it was there because defendant’s employees were negligent, the Court said:

“She has established clearly that the piece of banana was there when she entered the store; that she stepped upon the piece of banana; and that it caused her to slip, fall, and be injured. The burden then shifts to the defendant to go forward with the evidence to exculpate itself from the presumption that it was negligent.”

Similarly in Gonzales v. Winn-Dixie, 326 So.2d 486 (La. 1976), the Court said:

“. . . plaintiffs established that there was a spill of olive oil about two feet in diameter in the aisle where Mrs. Gonzales was shopping; that the oil came from a broken bottle near the olive oil shelf; that she did not see the oil spill; that she stepped into the olive oil; and that it caused her to slip, fall, and be injured.
“Upon proof of such facts, we recently held in Kavlich v. Kramer, supra, that the duty of going forward with the evidence to exculpate the store employees from negligence shifts to the store owner. When it appears that a third person dropped the foreign substance, the store owner must establish that periodic inspections made and other protective measures taken were reasonable. Implicit in the decision is a recognition that, in the self-service system, customers are prone to drop objects on the floor and that a customer who slips and falls on such an object is usually in no position to establish how long it has been on the floor.”

In the instant case the first question is whether plaintiff “has established clearly” [556]*556those facts which she must before the burden shifts to defendant to exculpate its insured from the presumption of negligence. Plaintiff established that she fell but there is a conflict as to why she fell, she and her daughter testifying that she slipped on a puddle of water, and two store employees saying that plaintiff told them that her foot got caught in the shopping cart. But even if this conflict is resolved in her favor and one accepts the premise that she stepped in a puddle of water before she fell, has she “established clearly” that this caused her to slip, fall, and be injured? A wet spot on an asphalt floor is not necessarily slippery as is a piece of banana or a spill of olive oil. There is no evidence that this floor became unusually slippery when wet. When the trial judge found that plaintiff failed to prove her case by a preponderance of the evidence perhaps he had some of these questions on his mind. Moreover, on initial cross examination of plaintiff she was asked whether she ever “had any other problems with falling” to which she replied: “In ’60 — about twelve or thirteen years ago I had a fall,” and when recalled for cross examination at the end of the trial she admitted that she fell down in a Winn Dixie Store in 1969 and made a settlement with them of her claim. One can only speculate on the effect this testimony had on the trial judge’s evaluation of plaintiff’s case. Perhaps he was convinced that plaintiff was unusually clumsy and prone to fall even where no hazardous condition existed.

Nevertheless, if these questions are ignored and one assumes that plaintiff sufficiently carried her burden of proof with the result that the burden shifted to defendant to exculpate its assured from the presumption of negligence I believe that defendant met this burden.

On this point, the Supreme Court said in Kavlich:

“Although there is testimony as to clean-up procedures this does not sufficiently discharge defendant’s burden in the instant case. The last scheduled clean-up procedure was two hours before plaintiff’s injury.

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Related

Millsaps v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.
331 So. 2d 478 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
327 So. 2d 554, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 3287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millsaps-v-aetna-casualty-surety-co-lactapp-1976.