Plaintiff Negri slipped and fell in a Stop & Shop supermarket on broken jars of baby food in the baby-food aisle. Immediately after the fall, broken glass and baby food were observed on the floor where she had slipped. A bystander who had been near the aisle for approximately 15–20 minutes before the accident testified that she had not heard any jars drop during that entire period, allowing an inference that the jars were already on the floor for at least that long. There was no conclusive evidence that any store employee had inspected or cleaned the aisle in the period immediately preceding the fall. Negri sued Stop & Shop for negligence, alleging that the store either created the dangerous condition or had constructive notice of it. At trial, the jury found for Negri. The Appellate Division reversed and dismissed the complaint for insufficient proof of notice. The Court of Appeals granted review.
Whether circumstantial evidence that broken jars of baby food were on the supermarket floor for at least 15–20 minutes before the plaintiff's fall is sufficient to permit a jury to find that the store had constructive notice of the dangerous condition.
A property owner may be liable for a slip-and-fall hazard if it created the dangerous condition, had actual notice of it, or had constructive notice of it. Constructive notice exists when the condition was visible and apparent and existed for a sufficient length of time prior to the accident to permit the defendant's employees to discover and remedy it. Constructive notice may be established by competent circumstantial evidence; direct evidence of the exact time the condition arose is not required.
Yes. The circumstantial evidence that the broken jars had been on the floor for at least 15–20 minutes before the fall was sufficient to create a jury question on constructive notice; therefore, dismissal was improper. The Court of Appeals reversed the Appellate Division and reinstated the jury's verdict for the plaintiff.
The Court of Appeals reasoned that the jury could permissibly infer from the bystander's testimony—that she had been within earshot of the aisle for 15–20 minutes without hearing any jars fall—that the baby food and broken glass were already on the floor during that period. Such an inference, if credited by the jury, supports a finding that the dangerous condition existed for a sufficient length of time to have been discovered and remedied by the store's employees in the exercise of reasonable care. The court emphasized that plaintiffs may rely on circumstantial evidence to prove constructive notice; they need not provide direct proof of when the spill occurred or that a particular employee saw it. Additionally, the defendant offered no definitive evidence of a timely inspection in the period immediately preceding the accident that would negate an inference of notice. In light of the trial record, the Appellate Division erred in substituting its view of the evidence for that of the jury. Because there was legally sufficient evidence from which a rational jury could find constructive notice, the verdict for the plaintiff had to be reinstated.
Negri is a cornerstone New York case demonstrating that constructive notice can be proven through circumstantial evidence about the duration of a hazard. It teaches that the key inquiry is whether the condition was visible and apparent for long enough that reasonable inspections would have discovered it. For law students, Negri provides a practical template for building—or attacking—a prima facie premises liability case: plaintiffs marshal time-and-opportunity facts (e.g., duration, location, lack of recent inspection), and defendants counter with evidence of reasonable inspection protocols and timing. The case is often contrasted with Gordon, where the Court found the evidence too speculative to show how long a hazard existed.
Negri v. Stop and Shop stands for the practical proposition that premises liability often turns on reasonable inferences from everyday observations. By validating circumstantial proof of a spill's duration, the Court of Appeals ensured that juries—not appellate courts—resolve close factual disputes about constructive notice when there is a rational evidentiary basis.