Emery v. Midwest Amusement & Realty Co.

248 N.W. 804, 125 Neb. 54, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 152
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1933
DocketNo. 28530
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 804 (Emery v. Midwest Amusement & Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emery v. Midwest Amusement & Realty Co., 248 N.W. 804, 125 Neb. 54, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 152 (Neb. 1933).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

Action for personal injuries occasioned by a fall in the balcony of a theater occupied by defendant, and in which at the time such alleged injuries were received a public motion picture entertainment was being presented by it.

In substance it is charged that because of, and due to, carelessness and negligence of defendant in failing to have lights in this balcony, thereby causing intense darkness therein, the plaintiff, while proceeding to her intended seat therein with due care, stepped onto an unIighted stairway without knowing the same was in close proximity to her, and thereby fell, receiving as a result the injuries complained of.

The answer admits the corporate capacity of defendant, the ownership and operation of the theater by it, and the physical surroundings which constituted the locus in quo; denies the occurrence of the accident and the infliction of the injuries complained of and the negligence alleged; and affirmatively alleges that at the times mentioned in plaintiff’s petition the theater was adequately lighted, the seat and aisle lights were burning, and any injuries to plaintiff, if any there were, at the time and place alleged by her, were caused wholly by the carelessness and negligence of plaintiff herself.

Plaintiff filed a general denial as her reply to the defendant’s answer.

Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict directed by the court for defendant. Plaintiff appeals.

Under the record the sole question presented for review is the sufficiency of the evidence to entitle plaintiff to have her cause submitted to the trial jury for determination. The question thus stated is further harrowed by the fact that under the evidence introduced, for the purpose of this determination, the occurrence of an accident at the time and place alleged by plaintiff, causing substantial injuries to plaintiff as alleged, must be deemed adequately established. Therefore, it remains for this court to determine whether the proof discloses that this accident [56]*56was due to actionable negligence on the part of defendant, and, if so, whether the facts so proved are such that reasonable minds could come to no other conclusion than that plaintiff was guilty of more than slight negligence in comparison with the negligence of the defendant.

It appears that this balcony was equipped with rows of seats arranged in tiers rising from front to rear. Access to these was by a series of steps descending from the rear to the front of the balcony. The plan of the theater included adequate lighting by use of artificial lights. A part of this system was composed of aisle lights, or small hooded lamps, placed in the aisles at the end of the seats, which, when lighted, illuminated the .steps, and the light so confined and concentrated downward was evidently intended to, and did when “on,” assure the safety of the footing of the patrons in passing to and from their seats in the balcony. It seems that entrance to this balcony from the lower story was by a stairs, from the head of which it was necessary to proceed either to the right or left along the rear of a row of seats (or a guard-rail) to steps descending from the rear to the front of this gallery. On the day in question plaintiff, accompanied by her daughter, passed through the front entrance to the theater. There admission tickets for which compensation had been paid were delivered and taken up by the representative of the defendant thus engaged in the performance of these duties. Evidently with his knowledge they turned and entered the passageway to the stairs leading to the balcony. This was a place in common use by those attending the entertainments. Nothing was said to them, nor was any warning given them by the servants of the defendant, of the conditions then prevailing on the balcony. On passing through the doors at the head of the stairs, they found themselves enshrouded in darkness. However, the performance was then going on and pictures were being thrown on the screen. It would seem doubtful whether this situation would, under the conditions that may be said to almost universally ob[57]*57tain in entertainments of this kind, be such as to challenge the attention of plaintiff to possible concealed dangers to which she might be exposed. Patrons of “movies,” it may be said, usually sit in comparative darkness while the pictures are thrown on the screen. This condition is not only common, but apparently adds to the quality of the entertainment. Besides, in the instant case, it is disclosed affirmatively in the evidence that the plaintiff and her daughter then knew of the hooded lights and the purpose these lights served; knew that the light therefrom, due to their construction, was concentrated and cast upon the floor for the purpose of illuminating the steps which they would have to pass down to arrive at their intended seats. With such lights “on,” as they were obviously intended to be at the time of this accident, the complete safety of plaintiff’s footing was assured. Indeed, the only place of possible existing danger in the darkness then prevailing, so far as can be gathered from the evidence, was a “step-off” in the route passed over by plaintiff, created by the presence of the descending steps. Plaintiff, followed by her daughter, in the darkness, turned to the left after passing through the door at the head of the stairs, and in the proper and intended passageway “felt her way along” the back of the seats or guard-rail, expecting, when she arrived where the stairs went down, the aisle lights would be “on” and she could see the well-illuminated steps. There was no usher to direct her, and when she arrived at the stairway the aisle lights, on the presence of which she was relying, were not “on.” We are also satisfied that the circumstances disclosed in the evidence fully establish that there was a “step down” where plaintiff stepped into the unlighted aisle, and thus caused her fall and resulted in her injuries.

As to the subject of this action this court has adopted the view: “One who operates a place of public amusement or entertainment is held to a stricter accountability for injuries to patrons than owners of private premises [58]*58generally; he is not the insurer of the safety of patrons, but owes to them only what, under the particular circumstances, amounts to ordinary and reasonable care.” Welsh v. Jefferson County Agricultural Society, 121 Neb. 166.

So, too, the approved rule appears to be: “Ordinary or reasonable care on the part of a proprietor of a theater or moving picture theater to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition requires the exercise of reasonable care in lighting aisles, stairways, etc.; and this is such lighting as an ordinarily prudent person would have furnished under the same or similar circumstances, that is to say, taking into consideration the purpose for which the theater was used and having due regard for the safety of patrons. * * * It has been held that it cannot be said as a matter of law that the maintenance in a moving picture show, sufficiently darkened for the purposes of the exhibition, of a platform on which seats are arranged several inches above the aisle without lighting the place at which a step-off occurs is or is not negligence, but the question is one for the determination of the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
248 N.W. 804, 125 Neb. 54, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emery-v-midwest-amusement-realty-co-neb-1933.