DocketNumber: 75935
Judges: McMurray
Filed Date: 5/31/1988
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
Plaintiff and her husband brought an action against TG&Y Stores Company (“TG&Y”) and others seeking to recover damages resulting from injuries plaintiff wife allegedly sustained after she fell on the sidewalk outside a store owned and operated by TG&Y.
Upon defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the undisputed facts revealed that plaintiff wife was walking to defendant TG&Y’s store “between 1:30 and 2:00” during a sunny afternoon on April 13, 1986, when she tripped and fell on a “[s]lick and chipped up . . .” area of the sidewalk. In her deposition, plaintiff wife testified that there “wasn’t no water or no nothing . . .” in the area where she fell, that the “chipped” area was between the edge of the sidewalk and the front entrance of TG&Y’s store and that the sidewalk “was smooth at the door where you went in, but when you walked up to the sidewalk to go in, it was not [smooth].” Describing how she fell, plaintiff wife testified that “[w]hen [she] stepped up on the sidewalk, [she] made one step, started to make another one, that’s when [her] foot slipped out from under [her and she fell].” Plaintiff also testified that she had visited TG&Y’s store several times before her fall, observed the “chipped” area where she fell and affirmed on cross-examination that she had walked over the area “many times . . . [but] had never fallen there before ...” However, plaintiff testified that she had “seen other people fall. . .” in the “chipped” area before her fall. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and this appeal followed. Held:
In their sole enumeration of error, plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of defendants, arguing that a genuine issue of material fact remains as to whether she was distracted by merchandise placed on the sidewalk outside defendant TG&Y’s store and whether these distractions were the proximate cause of her fall.
“The rationale of the ‘distraction’ cases ‘ “lies in the rule that,
Judgment affirmed.