Zane v. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co.

2 Mass. App. Div. 478

This text of 2 Mass. App. Div. 478 (Zane v. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zane v. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co., 2 Mass. App. Div. 478 (Mass. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Pettingell, J.

Action of tort for personal injuries in which the trial judge found for the plaintiff. The injury alleged came from a fall caused by a slippery condition of the floor in the defendant’s place of business.

The fundamental issue in the case is whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the presence of the substance upon which the plaintiff slipped was in any way due to negligence on the part of the defendant. The [479]*479trial judge found that the substance was a surplus accumulation of floor wax for which the defendant was responsible. The report states that it contains all the evidence material to the questions reported.

There was evidence that the floor was waxed about once each month or six weeks; that it had been waxed not more than two weeks before the plaintiff’s accident; that when the floor is waxed, it is first washed and dried, after which a liquid polish is put on which is rubbed on the floor. After this has dried, an electric polisher is used so as to bring the floor down to a clean surface. Other than this description of a general practice there was no evidence as to what happened when the floor was waxed the last time before the accident.

The plaintiff described the substance on which she slipped as “a smootchy, dirty, greasy spot * * *; through that spot she distinctly saw her heel mark which showed light.” A few minutes later she looked at the spot again and saw “the same, dirty greasy spot, that it looked like an old grease spot, that it was 10 or 12 inches in diameter and irregular and had a streak through the center of the grease.”

Her daughter testified “that there was a spot of grease on the floor, dirty with a streak through it where her mother slipped. * * * that the streak was light and ran through the center, that the size of the spot was 8 inches long and indefinite in shape, * * * that there was dirt over the spot.”

This was all of the direct evidence in the plaintiff’s case describing the character and nature of the substance on the floor.

On cross examination the plaintiff testified that she had talked with a representative of the defendant and had made statements to him concerning the happening of her acci[480]*480dent and that in that conversation she had said that the substance on the floor was wax. It was pointed out to her that in direct examination she had testified that her accident was caused by a greasy substance whereas in the statement to the representative of the defendant she had said that the substance was wax. She then testified that she knew the difference between wax and grease; that she distinguished grease from wax because she knew what automobile grease was; that the substance on the floor did not have any other footmarks than what she had described; that wax after being used became hardened; that grease was a pliable substance; that the substance on the floor which caused her to slip was a smootchy, dirty, greasy spot ; that in her opinion the substance on which she slipped was grease; that she had “used a liquid wax in her home cleaning and that it had a greasy appearance.”

This was all the evidence there was regarding the substance on the floor which caused the plaintiff to slip. The trial judge found as fact “that the substance- upon which she slipped was about three-fourths the size of a foolscap sheet of paper, irregular in shape; that it was dirty and grimy; that through the center of it was a furrow of light color made by the plaintiff’s heel; that the- substance appeared greasy. * * * On all the evidence I believe a finding is warranted that the substance upon which the plaintiff slipped was surplus accumulation of floor wax and I so find. There was evidence that the floor was greased by a servant of the defendant about every month or six weeks, and that the last application of wax had been made probably not later than two weeks before this accident. I find that said surplus wax was on the floor sufficient length of time for the defendant to have notice thereof * '* *. ’ ’

The trial judge evidently classed “wax” and “grease”1 as of the same nature because he refers to the floor as be[481]*481ing “greased” by tbe defendant’s servant. We believe that there is a distinction between “wax” and “grease,” even snch a distinction as the plaintiff was endeavoring to make, the grease being “pliable” and the wax “hardened” after application.

A careful study of the evidence reported, which according to the report is all that there was, shows no testimony by any one that the substance on the floor was wax. The plaintiff in her testimony maintained consistently that it was not wax but grease. She insisted that she knew the difference between wax and grease, “that she distinguished grease from wax because she knew what automobile grease was * * * that in her opinion the substance on which she slipped was grease.” The only concession that she made to any similarity between wax and grease was that the liquid wax she had used had a greasy appearance'. She did not say that she had ever used it on a floor, and a thing which has a greasy appearance does not necessarily make a “smootchy, dirty, greasy spot.”

No witness testified that the spot was wax, there was no testimony as to the actual waxing of the floor the last time it was waxed, or as to the condition of the floor after it was last waxed, or during the two weeks between the waxing and the plaintiff’s accident. There is nothing in the evidence from which it might be inferred that surplus wax remained on the floor unless there was evidence from which the substance can be found to have been wax.

There remains the statement of the plaintiff that she had told the defendant’s representative that, the substance was wax. Even then, after the matter was forcibly called to her attention, she did not testify that the substance was wax, but, on the contrary, continued to maintain that there was a distinction between grease and wax. It was then [482]*482that she insisted that she knew the difference between the two.

The trial judge attached great importance to this part of her cross examination. In his finding of fact he said,

“In answers to interrogatories in a statement given to an investigator of the defendant at an earlier date, the plaintiff expressed her opinion that the substance was floor wax. At the trial she expressed an opinion that it appeared greasy; that she was familiar with the appearance of floor wax and distinguished between floor wax and grease; that there is a liquid type of floor wax which after application takes on a greasy appearance. ’ ’

The plaintiff’s evidence does not in some particulars go as far as the judge’s finding of fact. Her testimony as reported makes no mention of floor wax as distinguished from wax generally, and she did not say that she had ever used liquid “floor” wax or that it had a greasy appearance “after application,” what she said was that she had used a liquid wax “in her home cleaning” and that “it had a greasy appearance.” Whether this greasy appearance was before using or after it had been applied was not stated, nor was there any mention of its use on floors.

The trial judge evidently considered her statement to the defendant’s representative that the substance was wax as evidence that the substance was wax. In this there- was error.

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2 Mass. App. Div. 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zane-v-malden-melrose-gas-light-co-massdistctapp-1937.