RIVERVIEW REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, INC. v. Williams
RIVERVIEW REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, INC. v. Williams
Opinion
This is a slip and fall case. The plaintiff, Howard Williams, Sr., sued Holy Name of Jesus Hospital, alleging that an employee of the hospital had negligently or wantonly mopped his bathroom floor while he was out walking and that the hospital had failed to warn him that the bathroom floor was wet. After a trial on the merits, the jury found in favor of Williams and awarded him $100,000. The hospital appeals from a judgment based on that verdict.
The fall occurred on the morning of September 17 in the bathroom adjoining Williams's hospital room. Williams testified that he was served breakfast at approximately *Page 47 7:00 a.m. Thirty minutes to an hour later, two physical therapists came to Williams's room to take him on his walking exercises. Approximately 15 minutes later, he was returned to his private room and there he sat in a chair beside his bed. After the physical therapists left, Williams needed to use the bathroom. As he opened the door to the bathroom, he said, he noticed that the inside of the bathroom looked wet and damp. He testified that, although he saw no puddles, the ceramic tile floor of the bathroom "glistened." When Williams entered the bathroom he slipped and fell as he reached for the light switch.
After the fall, Williams said, he called for help until two hospital employees came to his assistance. He testified that as the employees picked him up off the floor the entire bathroom appeared to be wet and damp, but that there were no puddles on the floor. He testified that the backside of his pajama pants was wet and that there were "grit" particles on the "bottom" part of his pajama pants. Williams testified that he had not used the bathroom facility since the evening hours of the day before, but had been using a bed pan. Virginia Williams, the plaintiff's wife, testified that after the accident she received Williams's pajama pants and that they were wet with some kind of liquid.
Nancy Hyatt, one of the employees who assisted Williams after his fall, testified that when she found Williams the floor of the bathroom was not wet, although the inside of the legs of Williams's pajama bottoms were wet, and she said that she thought Williams has urinated on himself. Marian Giamalva, a nurse's aide who also assisted Williams, testified that she noticed that Williams's pajama bottoms were wet and that there was urine on the floor.
Louellen McGruder, a hospital service worker, testified that the bathroom had not been cleaned that morning, and, according to the hospital's cleaning schedule, would not have been cleaned until after the lunch hour, which began at 11:30 a.m.
In Bonds v. Brown,
In Logan v. Winn-Dixie Atlanta, Inc.,
The parties agree that Williams's status was that of a business invitee. The defendant's duty owed to him was to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition by the exercise of ordinary and reasonable care. Bonds, supra; Shaw v. City ofLipscomb,
To succeed on his claim, Williams had to prove more than that he slipped and fell on a foreign substance on the bathroom floor. Williams had to prove that the hospital had either actual or constructive notice of the foreign substance on the floor, or that the hospital was delinquent in not discovering the offending substance. See Bonds, supra; Logan, supra. See also, Speer v. Pin Palace Bowling Alley,
Williams testified that although he saw no puddles, he noticed that the ceramic tile floor of the bathroom "glistened." He said that the backside of his pajama bottoms was wet and that there were some "grit" particles on the "bottom" part of his pajama pants after his fall. Williams also testified that as he was picked up off the floor, the entire bathroom appeared to be wet and damp, but that there were no puddles on the floor. Williams's wife testified that his pajama pants were wet.
Williams alleges that he slipped on a wet substance and, therefore, that his bathroom must have been mopped while he was out of his room during his 15 minute walk and that the mopping of the floor gave the hospital actual notice of a dangerous condition. However, he presented no evidence from which it might reasonably be inferred that the bathroom had, in fact, been mopped. As a result, in order to find the hospital liable, the jury was required to infer from the circumstances of the accident that Williams slipped on a wet substance and that that substance was water and not Williams's urine. It was then required to go a step further and infer that that water was on the floor because his bathroom had just been mopped. Such a conclusion could have been based only on conjecture or speculation, and it cannot serve as a proper basis for a jury verdict. Perdue v. Gates,
Because Williams failed to prove an act of negligence or wantonness by the hospital, the trial court erred by denying the hospital's motion for a directed verdict. The judgment in favor of Williams must be reversed and a judgment rendered in favor of the hospital.
REVERSED AND JUDGMENT RENDERED.
MADDOX, ALMON, KENNEDY, and COOK, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Riverview Regional Medical Center, Inc., A/K/A Holy Name of Jesus Hospital v. Howard Williams, Sr.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published