Quote:
Originally Posted by Taltarzac725
A few days ago I had to use the bathroom inside a Villages' store before shopping. I opened the stall and danced around blood splatter on the floor along with the slight indication of feces. It was difficult to get around but I managed. Luckily for me a store employee was washing his hands when I was coming out of the area having to place my feet carefully. I told him there was blood in there and it looked like he quietly told a supervisor. I went shopping but did get some curious looks from a few store employees. Or, maybe I was altering my perception with my expectations as I assuming that this bathroom mess might be a topic of discussion among them. And they might have thought I was the one with the pressing medical problem. It also becomes a legal problem for the store if they do not act quickly to clean up the potential hazard for bathroom users.
I had not seen anyone who looked like they had just come into the store to use the bathroom and would have been on their way out as I was coming into the store.
I had told the store employee who had just washed his hands that I did not know where the blood came from.
Poop happens in even the nicest of stores.
We did cover slip and falls in my Torts course at the U of Minnesota Law School. But I am not in the habit of aiding lawyers . I did feel I had a duty to find a store employee and tell him or her about the liability risk in the restroom.
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Not sure what the point is. I've had some experience with the American legal system. Reported dirty bathroom is far cleaner than my experience. The US has more attornies per capita than any other industrialized nation. We also have more law suits. The question IS, which comes first the chicken or the egg? Law school? Training to argue both sides of the same issue depending on who is PAYING the bill.