Walker v. Greenberger

147 P.2d 105, 63 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 965
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1944
DocketCiv. 14120
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 147 P.2d 105 (Walker v. Greenberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Greenberger, 147 P.2d 105, 63 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 965 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

In this action for damages for personal injuries sustained as a result of slipping and falling on the floor of a vegetable-washing-and-cutting room in the rear of a public market, plaintiff appeals from a judgment of non-suit. The trial proceeded before a jury.

Plaintiff was an employee of a meat market which was a department of a general retail food market. Another department therein was a vegetable market. Said departments were separately owned and operated. Defendant Wally’s Gardens, Ltd., a corporation, owned the vegetable market. Defendant Saylor’s Ranch Market, a corporation, owned the general market building. Defendant Greenberger was the president of both corporations. The general market building was located at the southeast corner of an intersection. The entire front of the building, a distance of approximately 136 feet, and the west side of the building, for a distance of approximately 20 feet from the front, were open. It was the type of market generally referred to as an open market. The vegetable market occupied the west front corner of the market, and the meat market was in the west rear corner thereof.

About 9 a. m. on September 2, 1941, the date of the injury, plaintiff went to the vegetable market for the purpose of buying parsley or greens to garnish the meats in the meat market. When he asked the employee in the vegetable market for ‘ ‘ greens to put in between the meat, ’ ’ the employee told him “to go in the back and get them and not disturb the display [referring to the vegetable display in front of the market]. ’ ’ The place “in the back,” referred to by the employee, was the “back room” or “cutting room” of the vegetable department, which room adjoined the rear or south wall of the meat market. One entrance to the back room was on the west side of the building about 20 feet south of the rear wall of the meat market and about 50 feet from the front of the vegetable market. Another entrance was at the rear of the building. In order to enter that room it was necessary to go upon the sidewalk which adjoined the west side of the building or to go to the rear of the building. The side entrance was a door about *459 3 feet wide and 6 feet high. The dimensions of the side door and the distance from the front of the vegetable market to the side door do not appear specifically in the evidence, but photographs received in evidence indicate that the estimates herein stated, upon comparison with the known distance of 20 feet above referred to and shown in a photograph, are approximately 'correct. The floor of that room was “medium smooth” and was “something like asphalt.”

After said employee told plaintiff to go to the back room, the plaintiff walked from the front of the vegetable market and entered the back room through the side door. No one was in there when he entered or while he was there. He proceeded therein for a distance of approximatly 4 feet to a stack of crates of greens by the left wall. He obtained 6 bunches of greens from the top crate which was about 3 feet above the floor, and as he was turning around to his left to leave the room, he slipped, fell, and broke his right wrist.

There was no artificial light in the room, but plaintiff “could see,” and there was nothing to obstruct his view. He was wearing rubber heels on his shoes. Plaintiff testified that as he walked into the room on the date of the accident: he knew it was a vegetable-cutting room and that many of the vegetables were washed there; he saw “quite a few cuttings” on the floor; that an area on the floor about 7 feet square was covered by celery leaves, celery stalks, lettuce leaves, cabbage leaves, vegetables, and cuttings; that “two-thirds of it [the space on the floor] was covered and the other was scattered around, celery stalks, cabbage leaves, and so on”; that such cuttings “were laying around in piles,” and “there was quite a few piles around”; that the depth of the piles “might have been ten inches in some places, an inch and a half in other places, and an inch in other places”; that water “was all over the floor from the washing and cutting”; and he “was looking at the merchandise.” He testified further: “Q. [by attorney for defendants] What was the condition of the floor as you noticed it when you walked in there on the morning of September 2? Was anything on the floor? A. I saw quite a few cuttings. Q. There were celery leaves, lettuce leaves, cabbage leaves, and wet all over? A. Yes.” He also testified that the point where he slipped, “right in that spot,” was covered with vegetable leaves. The trial judge asked the plaintiff' as follows, referring to the date of the accident: “Did you find any place on the floor that was not cov *460 ered with scraps of vegetables or water on the floor?” Plaintiff answered: “Probably a few places.” The trial judge asked further: “Did you see any spots without any coverage either of water or vegetables that particular morning?” Plaintiff answered: “I really don’t recall whether there was or not. ’ ’ Plaintiff testified further: “ Q. [by attorney for plaintiff] Mr. Walker, when you walked in there that day, did you see that there was water underneath the cuttings ? A. After I fell I seen there was water. Q. Before you fell you didn’t know there was any water underneath those greens? [Objection which was overruled.] A. No.”

Plaintiff also testified that: He had been employed in the meat market 10 months prior to the accident, and every day during that period of time except his “day off” (Wednesday) he would get the greens from the vegetable market and pay for them. About one-half or three-fourths of the times he went for greens he went into the cutting room to get them. He was entirely familiar with the cutting room. Generally there was a lot of refuse and a lot of water on the floor. In the mornings that floor was always strewn with cuttings. About three-fourths of the times during the 10 months’ period when he went into that room there were cuttings on the floor. “Every time I went in there it [the floor] was almost always wet.” “They had a tub right there with water in it all the time.” He testified further: “Q. [by attorney for defendants] So that every morning when you went in there it was always wet, and there were vegetable stalks around on the floor? A. Yes. Q. And that was the condition when you went in there on September 2, 1941? A. Yes. Q. Now, there was not anything to obstruct your view as you walked in there, was there? You could see all right, couldn’t you? A. Yes. Q. And in order to get to those crates, you had to walk over these cutting places? A. Sometimes. Q. On this particular morning, September 2, 1941? A. I don’t recall, but I probably walked over . . . The Court: About how often take that ten months’ period . . . what proportion did you have to walk over green vegetables to get the vegetables you wanted . . . half the time, three quarters of the time or what? A. I would say half the time. Judge, I really don’t know. I can’t recall it.” He also testified: “Q. [by attorney for plaintiff] On the different occasions when you went in there in the past, was the floor dry at times? A. Sometimes it was, and sometimes it was wet. Q. Would you say it was dry half the time, *461 more than half or not ? A. No, not in the morning. Q. About fifty-fifty, or what? A. Certain times it might have been dry.”

The testimony of plaintiff therefore shows that he had gone into the back room for greens 100 or 150 times.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P.2d 105, 63 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-greenberger-calctapp-1944.