Fortier v. Hibernian Building Ass'n

53 N.E.2d 110, 315 Mass. 446, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 616
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 110 (Fortier v. Hibernian Building Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fortier v. Hibernian Building Ass'n, 53 N.E.2d 110, 315 Mass. 446, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 616 (Mass. 1944).

Opinion

Donahue, J.

The defendant corporation owned a four-story building containing offices and also halls which, for a consideration paid, it allowed to be used for meetings of various organizations and for banquets and dancing parties. The plaintiff, who was fifty-three years old, came to the [447]*447defendant’s building one evening to attend a banquet of the County Fermanagh Association, hereinafter to be referred to as the association. The banquet was to be served by a caterer employed by the association, in halls on the first floor of the defendant’s building. The plaintiff had purchased a ticket from the association which entitled her to attend the banquet. She seeks to recover damages from the defendant for injuries received by her when a group of boys running through the lobby on the first floor of the defendant’s building struck and injured her.

At the close of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff the trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant and reported the case to this court on the agreement of the parties that if the direction of the verdict was correct it should stand, but if the judge erred a finding should be entered for the plaintiff in the amount of $2,500.

Pertinent evidence is here summarized.

1. The defendant, for a consideration, licensed the association to use, on the evening when the plaintiff was injufed, two banquet halls on the first floor of the defendant’s building, and also to use, in common with other persons rightfully there, the lobby on the first floor. Control of the lobby was retained by the defendant. Findings were warranted that at the time of the plaintiff’s injury the lobby was being used for a public or semipublic purpose; that the plaintiff was within the class of persons whose presence there was contemplated by the defendant; and that the plaintiff was a business visitor with respect to the defendant since she was there in the right of the association for a purpose for which the defendant was paid. The defendant on these findings owed to the plaintiff the duty to use reasonable care to put and keep the lobby of the building in a reasonably safe condition for the purpose for which it was to be used. Shrigley v. Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc. 287 Mass. 300, 302. Colbert v. Ricker, 314 Mass. 138, 140, and cases cited.

2. The plaintiff arrived at the defendant’s building on the evening of her injury shortly after seven o’clock. While waiting in the vestibule for a friend for ten or fifteen minutes, she saw a group of boys — who later injured her — twice [448]*448run out of the building and twice run back again. They appeared to be fourteen or fifteen yéars old. They were dressed in overalls. Two of them had newspapers under their arms. They were “running wild . . . like wild Indians, pushing each other.” They were “pushing people upstairs and down.” Later, when the plaintiff entered the lobby, she saw the same boys “coming down the stairs [from the second floor] again.” She saw them “pushing and trying to get out and going by the other people that were standing; they were running at all times.” Still later at about eight-thirty o’clock, while waiting in the lobby with others for the banquet hall doors to be opened, she saw the same boys come “running out” of one of the banquet halls. Although there was room for them to pass her safely they struck her, throwing her to the marble floor of the lobby and injuring her.

A man named Armstrong, a member of the banquet committee of the Fermanagh Association, arrived at the defendant’s building on the evening in question between seven-thirty and eight o’clock. A few minutes after he arrived he saw a group of boys come “rushing in around the doors” and upstairs toward the superintendent’s office on the second floor and then go down to the basement. Later he saw the same boys in the lobby, “coming along jostling against everybody, knocking anything that was in people’s hands out of their hands.” They went by him and tried to get into the banquet hall but he stopped them. The boys were on the premises going up and down stairs for thirty-five or forty minutes before he saw the plaintiff injured by them at about eight-thirty o’clock. Twenty minutes before the plaintiff was hurt, Armstrong made an effort to get someone to eject the boys. There was an electric bell, with a button outside the door of the superintendent’s office on the second floor, which, when rung, could be heard anywhere in the entire building. Armstrong went to the bell and rang it. He waited awhile and rang it again. He rang it a third time but no one responded.

The defendant’s superintendent testified that on the evening in question there were about two hundred persons [449]*449attending the banquet on the first floor and twelve hundred to fourteen hundred persons in the dance halls on the second, third and fourth floors of the building. It did not appear that any employee of the defendant, other than the superintendent, was in the building on the night when the plaintiff was injured. He testified that he was in the building from seven o’clock until after the plaintiff was hurt, but he did not “recall hearing the bell” when Armstrong rang it; that at the time of the plaintiff’s injury he was in his office on the second floor; and that for half an hour prior to that time he was making “a routine survey of the building.” Neither the plaintiff nor Armstrong, both of whom knew the superintendent, saw him that evening until after the plaintiff was injured.

The superintendent had held that position for about eighteen months before the evening when the plaintiff was injured and prior thereto was for three years assistant to a former superintendent. He testified that he saw no boys in the building on the night of the plaintiff’s injury and that “he never saw any gangs” of boys there and “never had to put out any gangs of boys.” But the witness Armstrong testified that for many years he was at the building about five nights a week, and that within a year preceding the night of the plaintiff’s injury he had seen boys running around the building and acting as did the boys who were there on the night the plaintiff was injured. He had in the past made complaints as to this condition in the building and, upon receiving such complaints, the superintendent put such boys out of the building.

The plaintiff testified that she had attended many banquets at the defendant’s building in the two years next preceding the night when she was injured. On such occasions she had always seen boys there, dressed in old clothes or overalls. At times they would be very rough. They- would run up and down stairs and push their way through people who were standing in the lobby awaiting the opening of the doors to the banquet halls. They would try to get into the banquet halls, and at times they would gain entrance and would come running out with ice cream, cake and other edibles.

[450]*450A witness who had been superintendent of the building up to eighteen months before the plaintiff’s injury testified that, during his employment, boys in working clothes would enter the building, run through the corridors and disturb caterers and members of organizations hiring halls for banquets. Constant supervision was necessary to prevent such disturbances. Sometimes such boys would strike the witness and sometimes he would take them into court. Since the witness had ceased to be superintendent he had been at the building and observed no changes so far as the conduct of such boys on the defendant’s premises was concerned.

3.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brumbaugh v. Kenmore Club, Inc.
46 Mass. App. Dec. 146 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1971)
Palmer v. F. W. Woolworth Co.
451 S.W.2d 850 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1970)
Goggin v. New State Ballroom
247 N.E.2d 350 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1969)
Moran v. Bradlee's Concessions, Inc.
41 Mass. App. Dec. 7 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1968)
Colley v. S.S. Kresge Co.
39 Mass. App. Dec. 77 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1968)
Stamberger v. Matthaidess
155 N.W.2d 88 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1967)
Piercey v. Fred W. Wood Pharmacy, Inc.
37 Mass. App. Dec. 110 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 1967)
Kane v. Fields Corner Grille, Inc.
171 N.E.2d 287 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1961)
Priebe v. Kossuth County Agricultural Ass'n, Inc.
99 N.W.2d 292 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1959)
Connolly v. Nicollet Hotel
95 N.W.2d 657 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1959)
Doherty v. Boston Garden-Arena Corp.
155 N.E.2d 767 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1959)
Mathis v. Atlantic Aircraft Distributors, Inc.
140 A.2d 156 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1958)
Fisher v. Robbins
319 P.2d 116 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1957)
Boehm v. S. S. Kresge Co.
145 N.E.2d 691 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1957)
Gambardello v. H. J. Seiler Co.
138 N.E.2d 603 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1956)
Byron v. Fresh Pond Open Air Theatre
128 N.E.2d 785 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1955)
Belbusti v. Ceasar Tomagno, Inc.
8 Mass. App. Dec. 25 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1954)
Pfeifer v. Standard Gateway Theater, Inc.
48 N.W.2d 505 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1951)
Aragona v. Parrella
91 N.E.2d 778 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1950)
Hayes v. Boston Fish Market Corp.
66 N.E.2d 713 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 110, 315 Mass. 446, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortier-v-hibernian-building-assn-mass-1944.