Bennetts v. Silver Bow Amusement Co.

211 P. 336, 65 Mont. 340, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 233
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1922
DocketNo. 4,959
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 211 P. 336 (Bennetts v. Silver Bow Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennetts v. Silver Bow Amusement Co., 211 P. 336, 65 Mont. 340, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 233 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF COMMISSIONER LEIPER

prepared the opinion for the court.

Plaintiff instituted this action to recover damages for personal injuries. Trial was had to a jury, which resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $3,500. Judgment was entered on such verdict. Motion for a new trial was overruled. From that judgment, and from the order denying its motion for a new trial, defendant appealed.

It is admitted that the defendant is a corporation; that it constructed the Rialto Building, in the city of Butte, about the year 1917, and was at all of the times mentioned in the complaint the owner thereof; that a part of this building, known as the Rialto Theater, was constructed for the purpose of operating therein a motion picture show, which the general public were invited to attend; and that it has been continuously used by the defendant as such. The screen, upon which the pictures are shown, is in the front part of the theater. The floor of the theater is built on an incline and slopes from the rear to the front. At the rear there are some loges. About the center of the theater, and extending across it from north to south, is an aisle. Aisles also extend from [345]*345the rear, or eastern end of the theater, to the front or western end thereof. Between the aisle running north and south and the loges there were constructed a succession of cement platforms, which are raised above the level of the aisle. These platforms are level and are about thirty-three inches in width and are raised above the adjacent aisle about four inches at the rear and about eight inches at the front. A row of chairs is placed near the rear of each one of these platforms. In order to reach these chairs, it is necessary for one to step up, from the aisle, upon the platform. Between the center aisle and the front of the theater the chairs are placed on a level with the aisles.

On January 23, 1919, the plaintiff, together with her husband and two small children, went to the defendant's'theater, paid the admission charges, and were shown to seats by an attendant. At the time of the plaintiff’s entrance, a picture was being shown, the theater was darkened, and the attendant did not carry any light of any kind. The plaintiff was seated in the fourth chair from the aisle on one of the raised platforms. The plaintiff, with her husband and children, remained until the conclusion of the show. The husband left a short time before plaintiff, taking with him the younger of the two children. Plaintiff, carrying the older of the two children, arose to leave the theater which was still in a darkened condition. In stepping from the cement platform to the aisle, her heel caught on the edge of the platform, causing her to fall. In falling she broke the smaller bone of her left leg, about four inches above the ankle, and the tip of the larger bone was broken.

Plaintiff testified that she did not know that there was any platform there; that no one called her attention to it; that, in coming from the chair which she occupied to the place where the injury occurred, she looked toward the floor, but that it was so dark she could not see the floor; that she had been in the theater before, but had not sat where the seats were raised above the level of the aisle; and that in going to the chair occupied by her she traveled over- the same ground covered by her in leaving the theater.

[346]*346The defendant is charged with negligence in the construction of the building, through placing the chairs upon these platforms, raised above the level of the aisles, and in not lighting the building so that the plaintiff, and other patrons of the theater, would have been enabled to see the raise from the aisle to the platform, and in its failure to have, in some way, or by some means, advised the plaintiff of this platform; and it is charged that this negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. The defendant, in its answer, denies that it was negligent in anywise, and alleges as affirmative defenses the following: (a) Res adjudicator, (b) contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff; and (c) unavoidable accident and misfortune over which defendant had no control. These defenses were put in issue by the reply.

The only evidence offered by defendant was the judgment-roll in a former trial of this action. Objection was made and sustained to the introduction of this evidence. The exclusion of this judgment-roll is assigned as error.

The judgment-roll offered in evidence discloses that the parties in that suit are the same as those in the instant case; that the subject matter is the same; that the action disclosed by the judgment-roll came on regularly for trial; counsel for both parties appeared; a jury was impaneled and sworn; testimony in behalf of plaintiff was adduced, and that upon its completion a motion for a nonsuit was made by the defendant’s counsel and granted. A judgment was thereupon entered, which is in part as follows: “It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed * * * that the defendant be and it is hereby granted a nonsuit, and further that the defendant do have and recover of and from the plaintiff its costs and disbursement herein expended and hereby taxed at the sum of $-.”

Section 9317 of the Code of 1921 provides when an action may be dismissed or a nonsuit entered. Subdivision 5 of that section is as follows: “By the court, upon motion of the defendant, when, upon the trial, the plaintiff fails to prove a sufficient ease for the jury.”

[347]*347Obviously, the action of the trial court, as disclosed by this judgment-roll, must have been based upon subdivision 5, supra, for (a) the plaintiff did not dismiss the action; (b) it was not dismissed upon the written consent of either party; (c) it was not dismissed because of the failure of the plaintiff to appear at the time of the trial; (d) the plaintiff did not abandon the cause; and (e) the dismissal was not by reason of the provisions of either subdivision 6 or 7 of section 9317, supra.

Section 9318, Revised Codes of 1921, provides as follows: “In every case, other than those mentioned in the last section, judgment must be rendered on the merits.”

In effect, then, the section last above quoted provides that a judgment of nonsuit, entered upon motion of defendant when “the plaintiff fails to prove a sufficient case for the jury,” is not a judgment on the merits.

Section 9320 of the Code of 1921 provides: “A final judgment dismissing the complaint, either before or after a trial, does not prevent a new action for the same cause of action, unless it expressly declares, or it appears by the judgment-roll, that it is rendered upon its merits.”

This court, speaking through Mr. Justice Holloway in the case of Glass v. Basin etc. Mining Co., reported in 35 Mont. 567, 90 Pac. 755, among other things, says: “In most of the states it is sufficient, in order to render a judgment a bar to another action for the same cause of action, that it was rendered on the merits. But that is not sufficient under our statute, when the judgment is one falling within the class designated in section 1007. [Section 1007 is section 9320, supra.] .* * * So far as the judgment itself is concerned, there must be an express declaration of the fact that it is rendered on the merits; and if the judgment is silent, and recourse must be had to the judgment-roll, then what is it that must appear from such judgment-roll? Is it (1) the fact

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 336, 65 Mont. 340, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennetts-v-silver-bow-amusement-co-mont-1922.