Cassanova v. Paramount-Richards Theatres

11 So. 2d 238
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1942
DocketNo. 17863.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 238 (Cassanova v. Paramount-Richards Theatres) 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
Cassanova v. Paramount-Richards Theatres, 11 So. 2d 238 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff claims that while she was a patron in the Saenger Theatre, a large moving picture house in New Orleans, she sustained serious physical injuries when, as she was descending an aisle stair in the balcony, her left foot was caught between the end standard of a row of seats and the end of one of the steps of the aisle. She charges that the design of the seats and stairs was improper in that between the end of each row of seats and the tread of the step there was left a small open space in which the foot of a patron descending or ascending might be caught, and she also charges that the lighting in that part of the theatre was defective and that, as a result, she could not notice that there were such "foot traps", as her attorneys designate these open spaces.

Defendants, Paramount-Richards Theatres, Inc., the operators of the theatre, and American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, their liability insurance carrier, deny that there was anything improper about the design or construction of the theatre, or about the lighting system, and they aver that the entire theatre, including the lighting system, had been designed by and constructed under the supervision of an experienced architect, who had first made an exhaustive study of other large moving picture theatres and other large buildings, and who had designed many such large structures. Defendants also aver that "since the opening of said theatre thousands of persons have entered and left and do enter and leave seats in the balcony of said theatre daily by way of said stairway without any other person, to the knowledge of these defendants, having suffered a fall or having been injured by reason of said small spaces between the iron supports on the sides of the seats at the ends of the rows of said seats and the ends of the concrete steps, and that, therefore, this stairway and the arrangement of said seats was and is a safe one."

Defendants further raise the inference that the accident to plaintiff did not, in fact, occur in the theatre, pointing out that on *Page 240 that night no report thereof was made to any of the attendants.

And, finally, defendants in the alternative aver that if plaintiff was, in fact, injured in the theatre, and if there was anything defective about the design of the building or about the lighting system, the true cause of the accident was the contributory negligence of plaintiff, herself, "in failing or neglecting to watch where she was going and to take proper care while descending said stairway."

There was judgment below for plaintiff against defendants, solidarily, for $6,000, and both have appealed.

We readily conclude that plaintiff's injuries were sustained in the theatre, and on the night in question. The mere failure to report the accident is an incident which cannot overcome the effect of the positive testimony of three persons, plaintiff, her son and her daughter-in-law. Doubtless the seriousness of the injury was apparent and, probably realizing its severity, they gave no thought whatever, at that time, to the making of a report or complaint but devoted all of their efforts to reaching a hospital as soon as possible. The questions then are: Was there anything about the construction of the theatre or about the lighting system which justify the conclusion that a reasonably prudent theatre operator would have made changes therein, and, if so, was plaintiff, herself, at fault in not exercising proper care to see where she was walking?

On the night in question, May 24th, 1940, plaintiff, her son and her daughter-in-law went to this theatre, and after obtaining tickets, entered and ascended to the balcony. They walked from the front, or lower row, to Row "F" and there occupied seats for approximately 2 or 2 1/2 hours, witnessing an entire performance, and possibly part of a second one. As they left their seats, plaintiff's daughter-in-law descended the aisle stairway first, her son next, and then plaintiff, herself. She says that as she was attempting to put her foot upon the tread of the step, adjacent to the seats in Row "D", this foot (the right one), instead of striking the stair, was placed so far to the right that it was caught between the end of that step and the standard or support of the adjacent seat, and that she fell into a sitting position, her right foot being caught between the seat and the step and her left leg extending forward so that her left foot was under one of the seats in Row "C". In some unexplained way, she sustained "a fracture of both bones to the ankle joint, (left) known as a Potts' fracture."

Her son obtained help from two other patrons of the theatre, and they carried plaintiff to the foyer on the main floor whence she was taken to the hospital.

Plaintiff's assertions that defendants are liable to her are based, as we have said, on the charges that the design of the theatre was defective in that there was a "foot trap" between the end of each second row of balcony seats and the end of the adjacent step, and in that there was insufficient lighting at the point at which she fell.

The balcony contains slightly more than 1,300 seats. It is so constructed that the rear is considerably higher than the front, the rows of seats being placed on tiers, each approximately 12 inches higher than the one in front of it. These tiers continue from one side of the theatre to the other. There are aisles by means of which the patrons pass from the lower to the higher tiers and vice versa. Each tier being about 12 inches higher than the one in front of it, it is necessary that in the aisles there be intermediate steps, as a person cannot comfortably negotiate steps as high as 12 inches. These intermediate steps divide the height of the tiers equally so that there is a continuous stairway in each aisle from the front to the rear. Each row of seats is placed on a tier but the end seat does not touch the end of the intermediate step, there being a small space between the standard of each end seat and the intermediate step. This space is 2 1/2 inches wide at the rear and 3 3/4 inches wide at the front. There is an arm rest on each seat which protrudes slightly beyond the standard of the seat and thus extends partially over the open space mentioned. This arm rest is 18 or 20 inches higher than the top of the intermediate step.

The theatre was designed by and constructed in 1927, under the supervision of Mr. Emile Weil, one of the well known architects of New Orleans, who, prior to making the plans, visited many of the leading theatres in the United States, and who designed the Tulane Football Stadium, the Canal Building and many other very large structures.

It is shown that about 6,500,000 people occupied seats in the balcony in this theatre between the time of its opening in February, 1927, and the night in question, May 24th, 1940, and had made use of these aisles, *Page 241 and that no other accident involving these so-called "foot-traps" had ever been reported.

As against the testimony of Mr. Weil, who obviously thought that there was nothing dangerous about the design of the theatre or about the lighting, and against the fact that there had been no similar accident before, we find the testimony of two experts placed on the stand by plaintiff, Mario G. Zervigon and Gordon Frick, both of whom thought that the openings were dangerous and that the lighting was very defective.

We cannot avoid the impression of extreme partiality made by the testimony of Mr. Frick. During the giving of his testimony, although his sincerity was not questioned, he, on more than seven occasions, volunteered such statements as

"Of course, I am absolutely disinterested in the case, I am just giving impartial testimony here as a qualified engineer."

"I am not trying to knock anybody."

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Related

Wright v. Paramount-Richards Theatres, Inc.
97 F. Supp. 833 (W.D. Louisiana, 1951)
McQuillan v. City of New Orleans
18 So. 2d 218 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1944)
Cassanova v. Paramount-Richards Theatres, Inc.
16 So. 2d 444 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassanova-v-paramount-richards-theatres-lactapp-1942.