Schmoll v. National Shirt Shops

193 S.W.2d 605, 354 Mo. 1164, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 401
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 11, 1946
DocketNo. 39594.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 605 (Schmoll v. National Shirt Shops) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmoll v. National Shirt Shops, 193 S.W.2d 605, 354 Mo. 1164, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 401 (Mo. 1946).

Opinions

Action for personal injury sustained by plaintiff in falling in the entrance lobby of defendant's store. A jury awarded $15,000 damages to plaintiff, and defendant has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

It was alleged in plaintiff's petition that she, a prospective customer at defendant's store, stepped into the lobby entranceway provided by defendant, and was caused to slip and fall by the negligently unsafe condition of the lobby floor; the floor was of "terrazzo with brass division bars in it"; there was lettering of a metallic substance embedded in the floor; the metal letters were polished down to a very slick and slippery [606] surface; the entire floor of the entrance lobby, when wet, was slippery, unsafe and dangerous; and defendant failed to remedy the condition or to warn the plaintiff of the danger. It was further alleged that the defendant had theretofore undertaken to alleviate the dangerous condition by covering a portion of the floor with a rubber matting and that defendant had failed to put the rubber matting in place, although rain had fallen for a considerable period of time and the floor was wet, at the time of plaintiff's injury. *Page 1168 Defendant pleaded the general issue, and contributory negligence of plaintiff in failing to observe her surroundings and to "maintain her balance and equilibrium."

Defendant's store fronts the south side of Olive Street, a few doors west of Seventh Street, in the City of St. Louis. The open lobby entrance to the store is eight feet, three and one-half inches in width, and is nine feet long; "there is a slight incline upward" in the lobby floor. The lobby is flanked (east and west sides, and south end) by show windows, except 43½ inches of the south end where a passageway 33½ inches long approaches the store door. The distances from the passageway to the southwest and southeast corners of the lobby are respectively 36¼ inches and 20 inches. The entire floor is paved with "terrazzo," a kind of flooring made of small chips of marble set irregularly in cement and polished. (Terrazzo has been used a great many years in forming surfaces of floors.) Brass strips about an eighth of an inch wide, separating the colors of the vari-colored pattern of the floor, are embedded in the terrazzo and are useful in preventing the flooring from cracking when expanded or contracted by heat or cold. Words in brass lettering. "NATIONAL SHIRT SHOPS." are also embedded in the terrazzo. The word "NATIONAL" is (nearer the store door) south of the words "SHIRT SHOPS." The base of the lettering is toward the street and the base of the words "SHIRT SHOPS" is about 17 inches from the juncture of the lobby floor with the sidewalk. Each letter is 5¾ inches long and the letters vary in width, the letter "N" being 3¾ inches wide, and the letter "A" approximately 6 inches in width. The metal lines forming the letters are three quarters of an inch wide. Between the words "SHIRT SHOPS" and the north end, and close to the north end, of the lobby floor are words (in brass). "Coast To Coast," of smaller sized letters. The entire lettering is spaced in the east approximate two thirds of the front of the lobby floor. Wear has highly polished the surface of the brass; by taking a "straight edge little rule" and placing it on top of a letter, it was found that "it could be rocked up and down, showing the terrazzo . . . had worn down below the surface of the top of the letters" — this, a witness was not able to see with the naked eye, in other words, "standing up you couldn't see that difference." Looking down on the letters, "they present a very highly polished surface"; they are "slippery when they are wet"; relatively, the surface of the letters is more slippery than the surrounding terrazzo — this cannot be seen by one in a standing position. Terrazzo is a common surfacing of floors of lobbies of stores, and brass is used more than some of the other metals for expansion joints in terrazzo flooring, because brass is a "nice looking" metal; its abrasive qualities are "somewhat close" to those of terrazzo; and brass "will weather and won't rust." Brass letters do not aid in the construction or maintenance of the floor, but it is not uncommon to embed brass *Page 1169 lettering or designs indicating a store's name or a trademark or trade name in the terrazzo flooring of lobbies, entranceways, and vestibules of stores. Brass is also "quite often" used in hinge and threshold plates of "storeways." It was pointed out by a witness for plaintiff that many threshold plates of brass have corrugations, one half or three quarters of an inch apart, running parallel with the length of the plates. The corrugations have a tendency to be "non-slip." In our case, a shoe slipping parallel with the length, five and three-quarters inches, of a letter "A" in the word "NATIONAL" would not encounter such a corrugation, or other abrasive.

Plaintiff, at about 11:30 in the morning of September 8, 1942, alighted from a bus at the southeast corner of the intersection of Seventh and Olive Streets and proceeded westwardly across Seventh Street, thence along the south sidewalk of Olive Street, passing the windows of defendant's store. She saw an article she "was looking for" on display in the show window west of the store door, and took one step into the open lobby intending to enter the store and purchase the desired article. She had never been in the store before. There was no rubber matting on the lobby floor. It had been raining when plaintiff left her home, [607] and was still raining at the time she reached defendant's store; her shoes had rubber Cuban heels and were wet. She stood momentarily, closing her umbrella. "It was wet all around where I was standing." The floor did not "look slick or slippery." She noticed there was a slight upward incline of the lobby floor. She saw the brass letters in the floor, the word "NATIONAL" being in front of her. She then took another step with her right foot, stepping on one of the brass letters (the second "A" of "NATIONAL"); her foot slipped — she fell backwards and struck her left elbow very hard on the floor, sustaining serious injury. She was assisted into defendant's store and, while she was there, defendant's porter put a rubber matting on the lobby floor covering the "biggest part" of the word "NATIONAL." It was the testimony of plaintiff's husband that he examined the lobby floor at the place his wife had told him she had fallen. It did not look slippery, "but I felt of it and it felt slippery, and when I put my heel on it to see if it was slippery, I could tell it was slippery." Plaintiff's husband had been by defendant's store on other days, for a number of previous years; on those occasions, when it was raining, he had noticed "they had a mat out there . . ."

Defendant (appellant) contends the trial court erred in overruling defendant's motion for a directed verdict.

Defendant urges there was not that quantum of substantial evidence of negligence of defendant to justify the submission of plaintiff's case; and that whatever danger existed was obvious and further warning was unnecessary. Plaintiff (respondent), on the other hand, urges that — since the evidence tends to show the large brass lettering *Page 1170

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 605, 354 Mo. 1164, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmoll-v-national-shirt-shops-mo-1946.