Fieger v. Imperial Skating Rink

35 P.2d 683, 148 Or. 137, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 179
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 683 (Fieger v. Imperial Skating Rink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fieger v. Imperial Skating Rink, 35 P.2d 683, 148 Or. 137, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 179 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

The defendant, a corporation, was operating a roller skating rink. On the 12th day of June, 1932, plaintiff, a boy 16 years old, while skating as a patron in defendant’s rink, sustained injuries by reason of the elbow of his left arm coming in contact with and being thrust through a window pane.

We quote from plaintiff’s testimony:

“Q. Was this in the evening or the afternoon!
“A. It was about eight o’clock in the evening.
“Q. What did you pay to get in?
“A. Thirty-five cents.
“Q. At the time of the injury, what were you doing?
“A. I was skating.
‘ ‘ Q. Describe to the jury how you skated.
“A. The rink sets aside a certain time in the evening when they have skaters do different types of dancing, and at the particular time that I received this injury, I was doing a circle waltz with a girl partner. The rink wants to clear the floor to dance and then they called this circle waltz. The rink rings a bell to call our attention to it, and everyone must *139 circle. An attendant will ask them to leave the floor or get a partner. I was skating with this girl partner. We were dancing in an approved manner. When we got np to the north end of the rink, I was suddenly pushed or shoved, I don’t recall, and I fell against the bench, and there was nothing to stop me, so I sat down heavily, and my arms were up from the skating, and coming back down one elbow went into the window. There was no protection on it, so my elbow went into the window. * * * Things seemed kind of hazy for a moment, there, and I didn’t feel any pain at first, but I started to pull my elbow back, and sort of held there a fraction of a moment. I looked there, it seemed as though my arm had been cut off. I pulled my arm out, and started to skate to the end of the rink. I fell once, and got up and out to the entrance. Some boys put a tourniquet on my arm, took off my skates, put me in a car and took me to the emergency hospital.”

It was stipulated that the window where this accident happened consisted of steel sashes four panes high, the panes being 14 inches by 18 inches, the lowest pane extending to within 38 inches of the floor, the panes being flush with the wall of the building; in front and below the window was a bench which extended 19 inches from the wall of the building; the back of the bench extending 32% inches from the floor, the seat of the bench extending 16 inches from the floor.

Mr. C. M. Jeffres testified that since 1925 he had been manager for defendant and that during that time, except on the occasion in suit, no such accident as befell plaintiff had occurred in defendant’s rink. Mr. Jeffres also testified as to the number of people who had skated there from 1927 to 1932, as follows:

“Q. * * * How many people have skated there from the time you started your records until the date of this accident?
*140 “A. From 1927 up to 1932?
‘ ‘ Q. The date of this accident, I have reference to.
“A. Yes, it is 246 to 727 — 1 can hardly see.
“Q. What do you mean, 246 thousand or hundred or what?
“A. Yes, thousand.”

As part of his cross-examination, Mr. Jeff res testified as follows:

“Q. And you say it would be impossible for them to hit that window with their arm?
“A. Yes it is.
“Q. Why?
“A. Because it is away from the glass. The bench is in front, and is below, just like'that (indicating). It is not wide enough. It is 14 inches off the glass, and then on this side is the bench where the boy broke the glass, and then the other side is the pipe through the pillar.
“Q. On which side?
“A. The west side.
“Q. You have an iron railing?
“A. Sure, we have since we started.
“Q. Which side of the rink did this happen?
“A. On the north side.
“Q. There is no railing on the north side?
“A. There is no railing on the north side, but there is a bench. ’ ’

When both plaintiff and defendant had concluded the presentation of testimony and had rested, defendant interposed a motion for a directed verdict. After hearing argument thereupon, the court sustained said motion, and upon direction of the court, the jury returned a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff insists that this was error.

Defendant contends that the evidence fails to show any act or omission upon which even an inference of negligence can be raised; that it utterly fails to show any negligence whatever. The defendant also urges *141 that plaintiff utterly failed to show or prove that the respondent breached any duty owing by it to the plaintiff.

We quote from pages 17 and 18 of defendant’s brief:

“The evidence not only fails to show any negligence upon the part of respondent but it affirmatively shows that the respondent did exercise ordinary and reasonable care for the safety and protection of the appellant and other patrons. The uncontradicted evidence of the respondent shows that approximately 1,000,000 skaters had skated at its rink during the last three or four years and that during this period, as well as during the entire life of respondent of approximately 8 to 10 years, no skater had ever been injured at this window or any other of the windows in the skating rink. That this is the best evidence that the respondent could produce in order to show that he had exercised due care cannot well be disputed. ’ ’

It is also argued by defendant that plaintiff’s injury was the result of an unforeseeable intervening act of a third party.

The proprietor of a place of public amusement is bound to guard against dangers that could reasonably be anticipated and averted by the exercise of ordinary care.

As above quoted, the testimony of Mr. Jeff res, if not directly at least inferentially, discloses that defendant anticipated the danger to its patrons of impact with the window in question, because it placed a bench in front and below it. Evidently defendant also anticipated such danger with reference to the window on the west side of the rink because there defendant guarded the window with an iron railing.

*142 In the light of this testimony, by its own witness, defendant is in no position to contend that danger of impact by its patrons with the window in suit conld not be anticipated.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 683, 148 Or. 137, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fieger-v-imperial-skating-rink-or-1934.