Black v. American Mut. Liability Ins. Co.

37 So. 2d 63, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 580
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1948
DocketNo. 3032.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 63 (Black v. American Mut. Liability Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. American Mut. Liability Ins. Co., 37 So. 2d 63, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 580 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries brought by a lady who claims to have sustained a serious injury to her right leg when she fell after she had left her seat in a moving picture theater owned and operated by the defendant Capitol Theaters, Inc., in the City of Baton Rouge. Her total demand is for the sum of $5117 including physical pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of wages and doctor and other medical expenses. She also sues the American Mutual Liability Insurance Company as the liability insurance carrier of the Capitol Theaters, Inc.

In her petition she very accurately described the interior of the theater which is known as the Hart Theater, situated on Convention Street, the entrance being on the north side of that street. She alleges that when a person enters he walks in a northerly direction through the lobby and then turns to his left and walks down one of the passage ways leading from the lobby to the seats in the theater. There are two such passage ways, one on the extreme northern portion of the theater and the other on the southside of the lobby and there are, towards the western part of the theater, facing the screen, three separate tiers of seats, a large one in the center and the other two being smaller and each separated from the center one by a passage aisle. In the center tier of seats, the last two rows are so constructed that the floor level in front of each is higher than the floor level of the passage aisle which separates the center from the northern tier and the floor level in front of the last two rows of seats is approximately six inches higher than the floor level in the passage aisle. Consequently one desiring to sit in one of the seats in the last rows must step up from the aisle passage way in order to reach the floor level to which the said seats are attached.

Plaintiff alleges that at about 3:30 p.m. December 31, 1946, she purchased an admission ticket at the said theater for the purpose of viewing the picture then being shown and that after entering, she walked to the northern end of the lobby and entered and walked down the passage way which is extended westward from the lobby towards the rear of the aforementioned tiers of seats and upon reaching the second row of said seats she seated herself in the third seat south from the northern passage way and consequently was in the second to last row of seats in the center of the theater. She alleges also that the distance between the seat that she was occupying and the back of the seat in the row immediately in front is such that one cannot walk between the two rows of seats without experiencing great difficulty, and that at the time she seated herself the theater was very dark and visibility was very poor.

She then alleges that after having seen the picture which was being shown, at approximately five or five-thirty o'clock, she arose from her seat and started to leave by way of the northern passage aisle in the theater. That the seat immediately next to hers was occupied and as she attempted to step into the northern aisle the theater was very dark and visibility poor and she was unaware of the fact that the said passage aisle floor level was *Page 65 lower than the level she was on and she was thrown violently into the aisle injuring her right leg. She avers that she saw no lights burning in the vicinity of her seat which would warn anyone of the difference in the level between the two floors.

She alleges that the cause of her fall was the negligence of the Capitol Theaters, Inc., its employees, agents or servants, in having the passage aisles constructed in such manner that the floor level of the aisle was lower than the floor level of the platform to which the seats were attached and in allowing the difference in level to exist without placing any warning, or in failing to maintain such warning at all times. That they knew or should have known of that difference in the levels and knew or should have known that it was not discernable by its patrons, and that they also knew or should have known that patrons would fall as a result of that difference unless adequate warning was given of the condition existing.

To her petition both defendants jointly filed an exception of no right or cause of action which, upon being heard by the trial judge, was sustained by him and in a judgment subsequently rendered, her suit was dismissed and her demand rejected at her costs. From that judgment she has taken this devolutive appeal.

The point at issue in the case involves the duties of the operators of a theater, and especially those of the operator of a moving picture theater. We do not think that there is much dispute with regard to what his duties are in respect to his patrons and invitees who attend the exhibitions that are offered to the public in his theater and the serious question in this case, as we understand it, is whether the operator of the theater should be relieved from liability as a matter of law, on the allegations made in the plaintiff's petition, or whether, taking all of her allegations to be true, she should not be permitted to offer proof in support of them, with the idea that from such proof, some negligence might appear on the part of the defendant.

The trial judge sustained the exception of no right or cause of action because he found the case of Givens v. De Soto Building Corp. et al., 156 La. 377, 100 So. 534, controlling. The criticism made of his ruling on that point lies principally in the fact that that case was decided by the court only after a trial on the merits. The trial judge however also referred to the case of Suggs v. Saenger Theatres, Inc., 15 La. App. 142, 130 So. 817, which he did not interpret to be in conflict with the Givens case, and it is to be observed that the Suggs case was disposed of on an exception of no cause of action.

Counsel for plaintiff stresses the point that if we accept all the allegations of fact made in the petition as being true and correct, that the same express a cause of action. Whilst we agree with that proposition as a general rule, it is also the rule that even though a plaintiff would be able to prove all that is set out in his or her petition and, notwithstanding the proof made under those allegations, he or she could still not recover, an exception of no cause of action is good and should be sustained. Reading all of the allegations made in the plaintiff's petition in this case, in the light of allegations of a similar nature made in the numerous cases like it in which the claims of the plaintiff were denied, it strikes us that the latter rule which we have just referred to can well be applied in this case and the exception sustained.

After all, as stated, the matter resolves itself into what are the duties and obligations, under the law, of owners and operators of such places of amusement with regard to their patrons and obviously if these duties are properly observed by them, they have fulfilled their legal obligations towards their patrons and are not liable for any injuries they may sustain while in the theater. It is definitely established that operators of such places of amusement are not the insurers of the public nor of their patrons.

We find the law prescribing the duties of operators of such places well expressed in American Jurisprudence Vol. 52 p. 290, at Sec. 46. It is there stated as follows: "Theater and public amusement owners and operators are under the *Page 66 legal duty to their invitees to exercise due care, commensurate with the circumstances, to put and maintain their premises and instrumentalities, and all parts thereof to which persons lawfully present may go, in a safe condition for the uses for which they are intended and designed.

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Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 63, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-american-mut-liability-ins-co-lactapp-1948.