Sommese v. Maling Brothers, Inc.

213 N.E.2d 153, 65 Ill. App. 2d 223, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1174
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1965
DocketGen. 50,286
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 213 N.E.2d 153 (Sommese v. Maling Brothers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sommese v. Maling Brothers, Inc., 213 N.E.2d 153, 65 Ill. App. 2d 223, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1174 (Ill. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MURPHY

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant appeals from a $25,000 verdict and judgment awarded plaintiff, Mary Sommese, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained when, on a rainy day, plaintiff, a prospective customer, fell in an entryway of defendant’s store. In answer to a special interrogatory, the jury found plaintiff not guilty “of any contributory negligence which was a proximate cause of said occurrence.”

Defendant’s contentions are: (1) Defendant was not shown to be negligent. (2) Plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. (3) The verdict and answer to the interrogatory were against the manifest weight of the evidence. (4) Prejudicial trial errors were committed.

Plaintiff’s action is based on the contention that defendant failed to provide a safe means of entrance for a business invitee and was negligent by one or more of the following acts: (a) It used a type of marble terrazzo flooring not suited for outdoor use. (b) It failed to use any abrasive in the terrazzo. (c) It failed to remove the accumulated water, (d) It failed to use rubber mats, (e) It failed to warn plaintiff that its entry way was dangerously slippery.

On February 27, 1958, plaintiff was 28 years of age. The kneecap of her left leg had been surgically removed less than three months previous. She was able to walk without assistance, do most of her own housework, and partake in recreational activities. She walked without a limp and suffered no pain or weakness of any kind. She was due to return to her employment within several days.

On the date in question, and after having had lunch with a friend, plaintiff walked into the south end of the “Harlem-Irving Plaza” and walked three and one-half blocks to defendant’s store at the north end of the Plaza. It had been raining periodically throughout the day. During lunch it rained quite heavily, and while plaintiff was walking through the Plaza it was drizzling. Plaintiff was without a raincoat, umbrella, galoshes or rubbers. She was wearing shoes with a “stack heel” about an inch and one half to two inches. The soles of her shoes had been “roughed up” by her husband with light sandpaper.

When plaintiff arrived at Maling’s, she took a look at the front windows. “I knew the shoes I wanted. . . . They were put on display in the window. ... I saw the shoes and then I started into the store. So as I continued walking on in, my foot slipped, the right leg, out in front of me . . . and I went down with my left leg completely under my body and the right leg out in front of me. . . . I felt my right leg slipping and I had tried to brace myself against the left window . . . and I just couldn’t reach it.”

On cross-examination, she testified, “When I turned the corner and started up into this entryway, it was wet. I saw water when I was just starting to walk into the entryway. The water began right at the edge of the sidewalk more or less continuing on to about halfway. . . . When I turned the corner and walked in there, the water that I saw on the floor, to my knowledge, extended all the way across. ... I was standing in water. I would say it covered the whole sole of my shoe. ... I had no trouble seeing in there. . . . The water appeared to be the same consistency all over. ... I was aware of the fact that there was another entryway to the store. I knew that when I came up to the front of the store. ... I have no idea whether the water came from rain or whether it was tracked in. All I know, it was wet. . . . I was looking at the floor. I saw it was wet. It looked very glassy. I didn’t know it was slippery.” She saw no “depression or indentation in the entryway.” The evidence indicates there was a slight incline from the door down to the sidewalk.

Plaintiff’s expert witness stated that he had been in the architectural profession for fifteen years. He had examined the floor surface visually and by feeling it with his hands. He testified that “it is a known fact that terrazzo, upon becoming wet, is very slippery. And I would not have used this type of installation for this entryway, without the addition of an abrasive material added to the mortar mix.” He also testified that he wetted the surface and rubbed it to see if he could detect any abrasive material. He stated, “If any abrasive material had been added it would have been apparent to my examination. . . . From that examination I could not tell that there was any abrasive material added.” The witness further stated he had used that type of floor “for interior uses” since “upon becoming wet it becomes very slippery and it is hazardous. . . . Often mats are used on top of the terrazzo to prevent its hazardousness on a rainy day.”

Five defense witnesses testified as to the occurrence and the floor condition at that time. A Cashier in the store, whose station was- just inside the door of the south entryway, stated she did not see plaintiff fall. She saw plaintiff standing in front of the store by the corner of the window. When she next noticed plaintiff, she was lying on the ground with her head on the sidewalk and her feet partially in the entryway. She could not see any puddles or collection of water in the entrance. There were no indentations or depressions in the floor. It had rained that morning, and it was drizzling in the afternoon and the wind was blowing. The store had no rubber mat to put down in the entryway when wet.

Defendant’s assistant manager testified that when he first saw plaintiff, she was lying on the sidewalk in front of the store. He did not recall seeing any puddles, large accumulations of water, indentations or depressions in the surface. A village employee testified that he was driving through the shopping center about noon and happened to see a woman standing near the showcase at Maling’s and just falling down or dropping down by the case. “It was a little slippery and a little wet from the mist where the people would track in the water as they were walking in and out of the store there. As to whether there were any large accumulations or puddles of water, no, there was no water or anything in there. . . . The floor was a little misty. ... I walked over those spots with the woman when I walked her into the store and I had to walk back out again. This was slippery.” The Plaza maintenance engineer said, “To my knowledge there were no puddles.” The Village Chief of Police said that he was called to the scene of the occurrence and did not see any puddles, accumulations of water, indentations or holes.

Defendant’s expert witness testified that he was a Professor of Metallurgical Engineering since 1954. He examined the floor with a machine used for testing slipperiness. It is a pendulum which attempts to simulate the glancing blow struck against the floor by a human foot wearing a shoe. The pendulum is started at an angle of 45 degrees and, therefore, if it faced no resistance, would swing up to 45 degrees on the other side. He tested a terrazzo, vinyl tile, ceramic tile, oak tile and asphalt tile floor. He stated that “the figure we came up with on the unworn spot in the Maling’s lobby when wet was an angle of 33 degrees. That is how far the pendulum swung on the upswing. The figures that I am giving you are the average of several tests on each floor. On the terrazzo floor the figure was 30 degrees. The figure for vinyl tile was 32 degrees and for ceramic tile was 26 degrees. The oak tile was 30 degrees.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.E.2d 153, 65 Ill. App. 2d 223, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 1174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sommese-v-maling-brothers-inc-illappct-1965.