Van Boven v. F. W. Woolworth Co.

123 S.E.2d 862, 239 S.C. 519, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 8, 1962
Docket17872
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 S.E.2d 862 (Van Boven v. F. W. Woolworth Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Boven v. F. W. Woolworth Co., 123 S.E.2d 862, 239 S.C. 519, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 143 (S.C. 1962).

Opinion

Moss, Justice.

Mrs. Lois W. Van Boven, the respondent herein, brought this action against F. W. Woolworth Company, the appellant herein, to recover damages for personal injuries which she alleged she sustained as the result of a fall she suffered while a customer in appellant’s store in Charleston, South Carolina.

The respondent alleged in her complaint that on May 4, 1959, at about 4:30 P.M., she was a customer in the appellant’s store. She alleged that in connection with said store, the appellant maintains a section known as a “garden shop”, where plants, seeds, and garden tools are sold. The respondent entered the garden shop for the purpose of purchasing gardenia bushes. It is alleged in the complaint that prior to the entry of the respondent into the garden shop of the appellant, that some person or persons working in or near a flower bed left a number of garden tools, including a claw, small shovel and curved digger in one of the said flower beds, and also left a section of low wire fencing in such a position that it partially blocked an aisle or walkway regularly used by customers of said store. It was alleged that while the respondent was walking through the garden shop, relying on the fact that the premises would be maintained in a reasonably safe condition, and while she was proceeding along the regular aisle or walkway, she tripped and fell over the section of wire fencing left in said aisle or walkway by the appellant, its agents and servants, and was injured- thereby.

The respondent alleged that the appellant was negligent and reckless in failing to exercise reasonable care in maintaining its aisles and walkways in a reasonably safe condition for use by customers, in failing to make proper and timely inspection of the aisles and walkways, in moving a section of wire fencing into said aisle or walkway and leaving the same therein and failing to remove the same *522 before allowing customers to walk there, and in failing to warn the respondent of the dangerous condition existing by reason of the wire fencing being left in and partially blocking the said aisle or walkway.

The appellant, by way of answer, denied the allegations of the complaint and set up as an affirmative defense contributory negligence and willfulness of the respondent. The appellant admitted that the respondent had fallen in the garden shop but denied that its agents and servants had left a section of wire fencing in the aisle or walkway. It was further alleged that whatever injuries the respondent sustained were caused by her contributory negligence and willfulness in failing to exercise normal and ordinary care for her own safety while walking in said store and failing to observe her footing and to look where she was walking.

The case came on for trial before the Honorable George T. Gregory, Jr., Presiding Judge, and a jury, at the February 1960 term of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County. A verdict was rendered for the respondent for actual damages.

The respondent testified that she went into the store of the appellant for the purpose of shopping. She decided while in the store to purchase some gardenia bushes and this necessitated her going into the “garden shop”. Thereupon, she entered the “garden shop” by going up two or three steps to a platform and then stepping down to the gravel surface of said shop. She testified that she walked to the left around a flower bed to go in the back to look for the gardenia bushes and that as she was so walking she tripped over either a wire or a wire display basket, one end of which was resting in the aisle and the other on the edge of the flower bed. She testified that she did not see this wire or wire display basket because the color blended with the gravel floor of the garden shop. She also testified that her foot caught under the wire or display basket and she fell injuring her knee. She also testified that adjacent to the point where she *523 fell there was a curved digger used in flower pots, and a little shovel, a hammer, “and there was dirt all on the outside of the bed on the ground where they had been working on these flowers, and I noticed from the flower bed where they had pulled some flowers out.” The respondent then testified that after she had been helped up by some unknown person, that she hobbled back into the store and saw an employee in the lamp department of the store. She identified this employee as being such because she had priced a trash can from her the week before. She detailed the conversation with this salesgirl as follows:

“And I said, well, I had a fall. She says, well, my goodness. I said, yes, a pretty bad fall. I said, see here, my hose is all torn. I didn’t pull my dress up and show her all that. She said, well, just a minute, I’ll call my supervisor. I said all right thank you, I’ll just stand right here. I’m so upset, I said, if you will, .for me, please. So, she walks up with this gray headed lady — she was rather a short woman, she looked like she was in her fifties. As she walked up to me with this woman, the supervisor, she said this is the lady that fell outside in the flower bed where they had been working.”

The statement that “This is the lady that fell outside in the flower bed where they had been working” was objected to by the appellant on the ground that such was hearsay. The objection to this testimony has been preserved by proper exception and the appellant now contends that the statement of the salesgirl should have been excluded because such was not a part of the res gestae nor did such constitute an admission on the part of the appellant. It is contended by the appellant that the aforesaid testimony was material and damaging as it tended to corroborate the theory of the respondent that workmen of the appellant had left tools and debris in the aisle of the store. The trial Judge is charged with error in admitting this testimony. The appellant takes the further position that, excluding the statement of the salesgirl, the remaining testimony is insufficient to support a verdict against the appellant in favor of the respondent. The *524 trial Judge is charged with error in failing to direct a verdict or grant a judgment non obstante veredicto on the ground that there was no legal evidence produced from which a reasonable inference can be drawn that the appellant was guilty of actionable negligence. Alternatively, the appellant moved for a new trial on the same grounds as are contained in the motion for the directed verdict and judgment non obstante veredicto.

To make declarations a part of the res gestae, they must be contemporaneous with the main fact, not, however, precisely concurrent in point of time. If they spring out of the transaction, elucidate it, and are made at a time so near to it as reasonably to preclude the idea of deliberate design, they are then regarded as contemporaneous. State v. McDaniel, 68 S. C. 304, 47 S. E. 384; Lazar v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., et al., 197 S. C. 74, 14 S. E. (2d) 560; Marks v. I. M. Pearlstine & Sons, 203 S. C. 318, 26 S. E. (2d) 835.

The appellant relies on the case of Bagwell v. McLellan Stores Co., 216 S. C. 207, 57 S. E. (2d) 257, which was an action for personal injuries sustained in a fall on the floor of the defendant’s store.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.E.2d 862, 239 S.C. 519, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-boven-v-f-w-woolworth-co-sc-1962.