Schon v. National Tea Co.

274 N.E.2d 578, 28 Ohio App. 2d 49, 57 Ohio Op. 2d 72, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 494
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1971
Docket5043
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 N.E.2d 578 (Schon v. National Tea Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schon v. National Tea Co., 274 N.E.2d 578, 28 Ohio App. 2d 49, 57 Ohio Op. 2d 72, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 494 (Ohio Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Lthoh, J.

On October 3,1964, plaintiff, appellant herein, while shopping at one of the stores of defendant, ap-pellee herein, slipped and fell, sustaining various injuries. At the close of plaintiff’s case, the trial court sustained defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, from which decision plaintiff is appealing.

Testimony by plaintiff’s witnesses is that plaintiff and her son and sister arrived at the store somewhere between 5:45 p. m. and 6:00 p. m. Plaintiff fell at approximately 6:45 p. m. because of some grapes on the floor in the produce section of the store. Defendant’s record shows that the store was last swept at 5:00 p. m.

The claim investigator of defendant testified that all the stores of defendant have weight scales in the produce departments so that customers can weigh the produce, and that the floor of defendant’s stores is swept as often as needed.

The owner or operator of a store who invites the public into his premises to transact business is not an insurer of their safety, but owes the duty to exercise ordinary care to maintain his premises in a reasonably safe condition for the protection of such invitees. Boles v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 153 Ohio St. 381; Johnson v. Wagner Provision Co., 141 Ohio St. 584.

In the situation wjiere a store customer is injured as a result of slipping on a substance dropped on the floor by another customer, it must be established as a pre *51 requisite to recovery against the storekeeper: “ (1) that he or one of his employees had actual knowledge of the hazard and neglected to give adequate notice of its presence or remove it promptly, or (2) that the danger had existed for a sufficient time reasonably to justify the inference that the failure to warn against it or remove it was attributable to a want of ordinary care.” Johnson v. Wagner Provision Co., supra, paragraph three of the syllabus.

There was no direct evidence that defendant’s employees were aware of the presence of grapes on the produce floor. Therefore, the issue in this case is whether the presence of the grapes on the floor of the produce section of defendant’s store was there for a sufficient length of time to constitute a want of ordinary care by defendant in either not knowing of the presence of the grapes, or knowing about them and not removing them.

Plaintiff’s witness testified that the floor of the produce section in four or five spots was dirty or messy with such produce as lettuce or celery leaves and grapes on the floor, and that the floor was also wet in spots. Plaintiff’s son testified that the lettuce leaves were “old, dried up,” and that the grapes were “squashed and curled up.” Plaintiff testified that the lettuce or celery leaves were all rolled up and “dirty like.”

Plaintiff and her son testified that they came to the produce section at the end of their shopping and were there approximately ten to fifteen minutes before plaintiff fell. No one else was in the produce section while plaintiff and her son were there. Plaintiff stated that there were only five to seven people in the store when they arrived, and plaintiff’s sister stated that there were not more than ten or eleven people in the store when plaintiff fell. Employees of defendant who were present were the manager, cashier and a 16- or 17-year-old boy who cleaned the produce area after plaintiff fell.

Plaintiff’s sister testified that they arrived at defendant’s store about 6:00 p. m. She also observed the “messy” condition on the floor of the produce section. She was buying some groceries for herself and was at the checkout *52 counter when plaintiff fell. On her way to the checkout counter she passed the produce section and observed plaintiff there. She also could observe the produce section from the checkout counter. She observed something “black or dried looking” on the floor of the produce section.

Plaintiff contends that her evidence established that both plaintiff and her sister noticed the messy condition on the floor of the produce section when they entered defendant’s store. After reviewing the bill of exceptions, we find that plaintiff first noticed the condition of the floor of the produce section when she came to the produce section, which was approximately ten to fifteen minutes before she fell. Plaintiff’s sister’s testimony is somewhat confusing, but we find that she first noticed the condition of the floor of the produce section when she went to the checkout counter, which was ten to fifteen minutes before plaintiff fell.

Plaintiff points out that there were only a few customers in this store from the time plaintiff entered the store to the time she fell, and that plaintiff and her son were the only persons in the produce section during the time she was there, which was approximately ten or fifteen minutes.

Where there is no evidence as to the length of time a slippery substance dropped on a floor of a grocery store has been present on such floor before a customer slipped and fell because of such substance, defendants’ motions for directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence have been sustained. Sweet v. Big Bear Stores Co., 158 Ohio St. 256; Tiberi v. Fisher Bros. Co., 96 Ohio App. 302; Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. McCune, 46 Ohio App. 291; Zerbe v. Springfield, 38 Ohio Law Abs. 487.

Courts have also hold that the fact that a slippery substance dropped by a customer on the floor of a mercantile establishment was not removed within two or three minutes after such substance has been dropped on the floor does not constitute a lac-k of ordinary care on the part of the storekeeper or on the part of his employees. Hardgrove v. Isaly Dairy Co., 139 Ohio St. 641. See Johnson v. Wagner Provision Co., supra.

*53 However, in the instant case, there is evidence that the grapes on the floor were there at least ten to fifteen minutes, and probably much longer. The only Ohio case which has come to our attention that proximates the facts of the instant case is Fox v. Ben Schechter & Co., 57 Ohio App. 275, motion to certify overruled November 10, 1937.

In the Fox case, the evidence was that when plaintiff and her husband entered the store the husband noticed some debris on the floor of the store; that some fifteen minutes later plaintiff slipped upon some substance in the vicinity of the debris, which plaintiff’s husband said looked like lettuce leaves and grapes; and that upon examination of the place where plaintiff’s foot slipped, there was a wet spot with heel marks running through it, and there was a decayed grape at the end of the marks. The accident occurred at 5:30 p. m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 N.E.2d 578, 28 Ohio App. 2d 49, 57 Ohio Op. 2d 72, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schon-v-national-tea-co-ohioctapp-1971.