Court Opinion

ID: 3497405
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:05:00.357747+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:37.207366
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff, while a customer in defendant's store and following the manager to the rear of the store to be shown some goods, stepped on a hot-air register located near a counter about the center of the store. The heel of her shoe went through a hole in the register and she was thrown and injured. She had verdict of a jury and judgment for damages. Defendant asks judgment non obstante *Page 452 
for lack of negligence on the part of defendant and for contributory negligence of plaintiff.
Plaintiff's heels were high and about three-quarter inch by one inch across the bottom. She had worn similar shoes for nine years and they were in common use by a great many women. She had been in defendant's store nearly every day for a year and knew the location of the register. The meshes in the hot-air register were about one inch square, some variations occurring in manufacturing, and, on experiment, it was found that the heels of plaintiff's shoes would go through several but not all of the openings.
The register was of standard construction, so recognized in the heating trade, and of size and character commonly used in floors of stores and buildings frequented by the public. Defendant was lessee of the store, had maintained it four years, had served 1,800 or more customers per week, most of whom were women and most of whom had walked on the register, and there had been no prior accident. It was not shown there had been any accident anywhere on similar registers.
Counsel agree upon the rule that a storekeeper is not an insurer of safety of his customers but that it is his duty to use reasonable care to provide a reasonably safe place for them on his premises.
The cases on the rule have been annotated exhaustively in 58 A.L.R. 136; 46 A.L.R. 1111; 43 A.L.R. 868; 33 A.L.R. 181; L.R.A. 1915F, 572; 21 L.R.A. (N.S.) 456, and, seemingly, cover nearly every conceivable state of facts except the one before us.
The register was not out of repair nor in an unusual condition. So, the question of defendant's negligence depends upon whether the register was so constructed and placed that a reasonably careful *Page 453 
person would have anticipated that injury to customers would be liable to result from its use in the floor.
The fact that the register was of standard construction, of a kind in common use in public places, while not an absolute defense (Hill Grocery Co. v. Hameker, 18 Ala. App. 84
[89 So. 850]), is evidence that an ordinarily prudent person would not have deemed it dangerous. Steggall v. W. T. Knapp Co., 241 Mich. 260; 45 C. J. p. 1241. The further fact that a multitude of women customers had walked over the register during defendant's occupancy of the store without accident and the lack of similar accident elsewhere are added evidence that danger need not be apprehended from it. Mullen v. SensenbrennerMercantile Co. (Mo.), 260 S.W. 982 (33 A.L.R. 176).
Defendant's negligence must be predicated upon the theory that it was bound to know the size of the holes in the register, the size of heels of shoes customarily worn by many of its customers, and, as a reasonably prudent person, should have anticipated that the kind of accident which occurred to plaintiff was likely to happen to customers using reasonable care for their own safety.
By the same token, plaintiff, as a reasonably prudent person, would be chargeable with knowledge of the size of her heels and the size of the holes in so common a thing as a hot-air register, of whose existence and location she knew, at least to the extent of apprehending that the heels might go through the holes. In addition, plaintiff had the duty to make reasonable observation about her. Rice v. Goodspeed Real Estate Co.,254 Mich. 49. Her attention was not distracted. Ordinary care would have disclosed *Page 454 
to her the necessity of special caution in stepping with small heels on a register full of holes.
Some of my Brethren think that defendant was not guilty of negligence to its customers in maintaining the register. Without deciding that issue, we agree that, under the circumstances here, if defendant was negligent, plaintiff also was negligent and cannot recover.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for entry of judgmentnon obstante for defendant, with costs.
CLARK, C.J., and McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, WIEST, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred.