Royal Supermart Memo
Royal Supermart Memo
Royal Supermart Memo
I.Intro
Apple: Your honor, the defendant maintains that it is not liable for the injuries sustained by
plaintiffs son and that this case be dismissed for lack of merit. We ask that plaintiffs claim for
damages be denied for (the following) three reasons:
1. First, plaintiff failed to prove by a preponderance of evidence, among others, the
negligence of the defendant, and the connection of cause and effect between the
negligence and the damages incurred, contrary to what every tort cases under Article
2176 of the Civil Code has maintained.
2. Second, as there is no sufficiently proven existence of fault or negligence on the part of
the defendant, liability is not established thereby.
3. And third, there is no justification of the award demanded being proportional to the
injuries suffered
negligence in the case at bar is defendants maintenance of nuisances. Article 694 of the Civil
Code defines a nuisance as an act,omission, establishment, business, condition of property, or
anything else that, for one, injures or endangers the health or safety of others. In one
jurisprudence, attractive nuisances were defined as dangerous instrumentalities or appliances of a
character likely to attract children in play. However, nuisances are considered as such if
maintained with the absence of the exercise of ordinary care. In the present case, neither the ball
nor the puddle could be considered as attractive nuisances. The ball could not be among the
merchandise in one of the stores grocery aisles as naturally, grocery items are displayed in such
and not toys. It also could not have rolled down the aisle from ineffective stacking or any activity
the employees do in their everyday course of duty.
MEMORANDUM
Defendant Royal Supermart, Inc., through the undersigned counsel and unto this
Honorable Court, most respectfully submits this memorandum as follows:
Statement of the Case
Joan Cruz filed an action for damages of P500,000.00 against Royal Supermart,
Inc. for the physical injuries of her son, Biboy, suffered at the defendants supermarket,
and for the medical expenses and the emotional anguish that it brought to her and her
son.
Statement of the Facts
On May 11, 2010, at approximately 10am, plaintiff Joan Cruz and her five-year-
old son, Biboy, were shopping for groceries at Royal Supermart. Plaintiff averred that
while negotiating the aisles of the supermarket, Biboys attention was caught by a loose
red ball rolling on the floor, which he then ran after. As per her statement, Biboy slipped
with a heavy bang on a wet section of the aisle shortly thereafter he chased the ball.
She testified that she saw a puddle on the floor where Biboy crashed down and claimed
that such puddle was caused by a liquid syrup that seeped out from a leaking bottle in a
nearby shelf. Further, she stated that after Biboy slipped, he shrieked from pain in his
right wrist which he used to stop his fall.
Joan then rushed Biboy to the Philippine Orthopedic Hospital where he received
diagnosis and treatment for a wrist fracture. Dr. John D. Lim, an orthopedic surgeon,
attended to him and did the operation on his right wrist. As testified by plaintiff, Biboy
also stayed overnight at the medical facility and recovered in about six weeks. During
this span of time, plaintiff claims that she, as Biboys mother, has suffered some mental
anguish for what happened to her son and that she and her husband have spent
P22,840.00 for doctors fees, hospitalization expenses, medicines and the new toys
they bought to distract Biboy from the pain and discomfort he suffered.
Moreover, plaintiff maintains that although a store clerk has helped her carry
Biboy to her car, the clerk was not very friendly and that there was no supermarket
cleaner nearby the puddle of syrup or at least a sign that could have warned people of
the wet floor and the danger it presents. Accordingly, she is blaming the management of
Royal Supermart for its gross negligence in failing to make its premises safe for the
customers.
On the other hand, defendant Royal Supermart, through witness Rene Castro,
the supermarkets supervisor of 5 years, denies liability for all damages as it claims that
it exercised proper diligence in making the premises safe. Mr. Castro was at the store at
the time of the incident. As testified, he was fixing new stocks of noodles on the shelves
when he heard the commotion one aisle away. He then rushed to the scene where he
saw Biboy lying on the floor while crying with pain, and his mother, Ms. Cruz who was
trying to minister to him. He, too, saw a puddle on the floor where the child lay. Contrary
to Joans testimony, however, he asserts that the puddle was from the items that had
fallen from a nearby shelf and believes that the syrup must have come from one of the
bottles that broke and spilled its contents onto the floor, which Biboy has knocked off
from the shelf when he ran wild down the aisle, supposedly running after the loose ball.
Mr. Castro then carried Biboy to his mothers car and accompanied them to the
Philippine Orthopedic Hospital.
Aside that the accident was one that cannot be reasonably anticipated and was
beyond the supermarkets control, defendant maintains that it is the responsibility of
parents, who often necessarily bring their child into the supermarket, to look after them
so as to prevent them from misbehaving, causing damage to the merchandise, or
getting injured.
Statement of the Issues
The issues to be resolved are the following.
1. Whether or not the management and employees of Royal Supermart was grossly
negligent in making its premises safe for its customers
What may arise therefrom is that what indicates negligence in the present case is
the sustenance of nuisances of the defendant. A nuisance is defined, under Article 694
of the Civil Code, as an act, omission, establishment, business, condition of property, or
anything else that, for one, injures or endangers the health or safety of others.
Nuisances can be hazardous distinctly possible to entice children in leisure, which
nevertheless are deemed as attractive if preserved without the presence of the
employment of standard care and supervision.
In the case present, neither of the two particulars, the ball nor the puddle, could
be reckoned to as attractive nuisances. The defendant adhered to standard care and
supervision in keeping its premises in order and good condition. It could be that the said
ball was not among the goods in one of grocery aisles of the supermart, where grocery
items, not toys, are naturally set out by them. The ball could not have slipped by the
aisle from inefficacious stockpiling or other bustle the staff do in their daily track of task
and assignment.
The supermart could not have alerted the shoppers of the unforeseen liquid on
the floor, in the possible circumstance, preceding the accident of child, that the puddle
was not there, as its probability is attested by Castro in his statement that from the
position of child, he could infer that the child had bumped into the shelf containing syrup
bottles and knocked off some of them.