Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Windham

16 So. 2d 622, 195 Miss. 848, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 332
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1944
DocketNo. 35482.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 16 So. 2d 622 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Windham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Windham, 16 So. 2d 622, 195 Miss. 848, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 332 (Mich. 1944).

Opinions

This appeal is from a jury verdict and judgment for four thousand dollars against appellant in favor of appellee for personal injuries claimed by appellee to have been suffered by her as a result of a fall in the store building of appellant located in Jackson, Mississippi, which fall was caused by the negligence of appellant. Appellee will be called plaintiff, and appellant defendant, in this opinion.

Defendant, on this appeal, urges among other contentions, that the lower court erred in not granting its request for a peremptory instruction, but, if not, that the verdict is so contrary to the great weight and preponderance of the evidence on the question of liability of defendant that the case should be remanded for trial before another jury. These contentions require a summary of the testimony.

Plaintiff introduced three witnesses — herself, her daughter and a Dr. Pettus.

She testified that as she and her daughter, Mrs. Mathiston, about 7:30 o'clock on Saturday night, June 27, 1942, were proceeding to leave said store building, and while walking along the center, or principal, aisle leading to the front, or street, door on the main floor, and when about the middle thereof, she stepped into a pool, or spot, of oil on the floor, slipped, fell to her knee and then to the floor upon her right hip, causing injury to her foot and hip; that the spot was slippery and looked like it was oily and had white "stuff" on it and there was a streak through it caused by her slipping. She said, "The place was about as long and I guess about that — it was just a place right there in the floor . . . it looked to be that depth . . . about one-eighth . . . A place, I guess, probably larger than a hat — a round place *Page 855 . . . I guess it was about this — about a foot and a half . . . a form of powdered stuff, and it was on my hose; it tore my hose and was in my hose . . .," and that one could see streaks through it where "other people had almost slipped at the same place —."

As bearing upon the liability of defendant she said, "I had stepped to one side, you know, when I fell the negro had some kind of broom — I don't know, just a broom, or mop, or something, he went over the floor, he had to move to one side to let me by when I fell, and when I went on up this way from where the negro had went over the place, or mopped on it, and he was down here, and there was a white streak where I slipped . . .;" that after she fell her daughter assisted her into a chair; that immediately after her fall a Mrs. Everett and Mrs. Nickens, employees of defendant working nearby, came up to assist her; that one of them called Mr. Lambert, the manager, who came to the scene, and she called his attention to the spot on the floor, and Lambert ". . . rubbed his foot over it where I had fallen, and it showed streaks where he had rubbed his foot;" that her shoes were not old, and the heels thereof were not worn or turned; that after some twenty to thirty minutes Mrs. Nickens carried her home in Mrs. Nickens' automobile; that on Monday morning thereafter she, at the request of defendant, went to the Jackson Infirmary for examination and X-Ray of her injuries; that X-Ray pictures were made and she consulted Dr. Gordin; that he said, "I was awfully swollen," but gave her no medicine or treatment and told her to go to bed, which she did; that twice thereafter, at intervals of some two weeks, she went back to Dr. Gordin, but he gave her no medicine or treatments; that later, some time in July, she went to Dr. Pettus. She then described her injuries and the pain, inconvenience and expense resulting therefrom.

Mrs. Mathiston gave, in substance, the same cause and nature of the accident, except she said Mrs. Windham, ". . . fell against the counter and bruised her foot *Page 856 and bruised her back . . . she didn't fall all the way down;" that Mrs. Windham weighed about two hundred pounds, and that the substance on the floor, "Looked like it was some kind of oil . . . it was right in the middle of the floor, almost as round as a hat, and it looked like it had just been put down; it was still wet."

Dr. Pettus described himself as a "Naturopath", and when asked, "What is that?" said "Deal with the natural healing arts;" that he examined Mrs. Windham sometime in July, and found "The pain was mostly in the triangle muscle there and the coccygeal . . . starting at approximately the end of the dorsal vertebrae, going down;" that Mrs. Windham returned later and he found an abscess on her instep.

Plaintiff here rested and defendant made a motion to exclude, which was overruled.

Defendant introduced eight witnesses, five of whom were its employees at the time of the accident, but only two of whom were so employed at the time of the trial.

Mr. Cook, the assistant manager, but not an employee when he testified, was on that floor, a short distance away, and Mrs. Nickens called him when Mrs. Windham fell, and when he got there she was sitting in a chair. He suggested a doctor and Mrs. Windham said it was not necessary; that she was feeling "all right"; that he examined the floor where she fell, and there was no foreign substance on it whatever, and he called attention of those present, including plaintiff, to that fact; that there were no streaks on the floor; that the place was about twenty feet from the main front door of the store, and in the center aisle leading to and from that door; that there were many people in the store at the time, and that from one hundred to two hundred people were passing along that aisle every fifteen minutes at that time; that those present examined the heels of Mrs. Windham's shoes, and the heels were badly worn; that the shoes were old; that when this was called to her attention, with the suggestion that this might have caused her to fall, she said " — *Page 857 possibly that was true;" that Mr. Lambert, the manager, was never present at the scene; that he asked Mrs. Nickens to carry plaintiff home, which she did in her automobile. He said there was no janitor on the floor at the time; that the janitor was never allowed to work on the floors during business hours, nor until the store had closed and was free of customers, and that the store did not close until nine o'clock on Saturday nights; that the preparation used for cleaning the floors of this store was known as microsheen, and that it contained no oil or grease whatever; that it was several times as expensive as oil or grease floor applications, and that instead of rendering the floor slick it had the effect of preventing the floors from being slick; that a great many large establishments were using it for that very reason; that in any event it had been about thirty days since any application had been made to the floors of this store.

Mrs. Nickens, not an employee of the store when she testified, was a sales-lady in the store when the accident happened, and was "just a little piece" away and saw Mrs. Windham fall; said plaintiff "turned her ankle over and fell," and she assisted her up; that plaintiff only fell to her knees, and that no other part of her body came in contact with the floor; that the spot was examined and there was no foreign substance on it and it was not slippery; that she pushed her foot over the spot, and called attention to the fact it was not slippery; that plaintiff's shoes were old and the heels were worn off on one side and turned, and that plaintiff then admitted this might have caused her to fall; that she drove the plaintiff and Mrs. Mathiston home in her car, and plaintiff did not appear to be in any pain, but was laughing over the accident and said she was all right.

Mrs.

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Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Windham
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 So. 2d 622, 195 Miss. 848, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-windham-miss-1944.