Long v. National Food Stores, Inc., 603
Decision Date | 20 May 1964 |
Docket Number | No. 603,603 |
Citation | 262 N.C. 57,136 S.E.2d 275 |
Parties | Anne Wolfe LONG v. NATIONAL FOOD STORES, INC., a corporation (also known as Big Bear Super Markets, Inc.). |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Cahoon & Swisher, Greensboro, for plaintiff appellant.
Smith, Moore, Smith, Schell & Hunter, by Beverly C. Moore; Greensboro, Morgan Byerly, Post, Van Anda & Keziah, by W. B. Byerly, Jr., High Point, for defendant appellee.
Plaintiff's evidence, considered in the light most favorable to her, Powell v. Deifells, Inc., 251 N.C. 596, 112 S.E.2d 56, shows the following facts:
On and prior to 13 February 1960 defendant operated a self-service retail grocery store in the city of Greensboro. Defendant's grocery store was so arranged as to have throughout the store rows of merchandise upon shelves of solid construction which were higher than a person's head, with aisles four or five feet wide between the shelves for customers to walk along to select merchandise for purchase.
Plaintiff and her husband were regular customers of this store. About 6 p. m. on 13 February 1960, a day of sleet and snow, they entered the store to buy groceries. After selecting their groceries, they went to the cash register at the front of the store to check them out and pay for them. While they were there, her husband said he had forgotten his shaving soap. Whereupon, she started to the drug shelf where the shaving soap was, which is on Aisle 13, to get it for him. While she was walking down this aisle to the drug shelf, her feet slid out from under her, and she fell to the floor. She remained there a few minutes and looked around to see what caused her to fall. She testified: 'She does not know the color of the floor; it was dusty and dirty and looked dark. The grapes she fell on were a dark color, purple.
When she returned to the cash register, she told the clerk there she had fallen on some grapes in the aisle and pointed to the aisle. Her husband testified:
On Tuesday after her fall she went back to defendant's store and told Mr. Smith, the manager, she had been to see Dr. W. J. Reid about the injury she had sustained in falling in the store on the previous Saturday evening. She testified:
It seems to have been universally held that a customer who enters during business hours a store kept open for public patronage to purchase goods therein has invitee status. Anno., 62 A.L.R.2d p. 16.
That a store proprietor is not an insurer of the safety of such customers on his premises, and liability for injury to such customers attaches only for injuries resulting from actionable negligence on his part is a principle of the law of negligence so familiar and so firmly established as almost to obviate the necessity of citing supporting authority. Waters v. Harris, 250 N.C. 701, 110 S.E.2d 283; Copeland v. Phthisic, 245 N.C. 580, 96 S.E.2d 697, 63 A.L.R.2d 587; Annotations 61 A.L.R.2d, p. 14 and 62 A.L.R.2d, p. 15.
Plaintiff's evidence shows that she entered defendant's store during business hours as a customer and selected goods therein for purchase. Under such circumstances, the law imposes upon defendant the legal duty to exercise ordinary care to keep its aisles and passageways where she and other customers are expected to go in a reasonably safe condition, so as not unnecessarily to expose her and them to danger, and to give warning of hidden dangers or unsafe conditions of which it knows or in the exercise of reasonable supervision and inspection should know. Raper v. McCrory-McLellan Corp., 259 N.C. 199, 130 S.E.2d 281; Powell v. Deifell's, Inc., supra; Lee v. H. L. Green & Co., 236 N.C. 83, 72 S.E.2d 33.
In Raper v. McCrory-McLellan Corp., supra, it is said:
The inviter is charged with knowledge of an unsafe or dangerous condition on his premises during business hours created by his own negligence or the negligence of an employee acting within the scope of his employment, or of a dangerous condition of which his employee has notice. In such cases the inviter is liable if injury to an invitee proximately results therefrom, because the inviter is deemed to have knowledge of his own and his employees' acts. Raper v. McCrory-McLellan Corp., supra; Waters v. Harris, supra; Hughes v. Anchor Enterprises, 245 N.C. 131, 95 S.E.2d 577, 63 A.L.R.2d 685; 65 C.J.S. Negligence § 51,...
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