Boyles, J.
I do not concur in affirmance.
This case originated in the common pleas court for Detroit and was tried before a judge of that court. Decision depended on a question of fact — was the defendant theater company guilty of negligence in failing to keep its premises in a safe condition to prevent injury to its patrons? Plaintiff was an invitee who was injured, and claims negligence of the defendant in permitting a wet, slippery substance to remain at a door leading into the ladies’ rest, room,, and a space to exist between the door and certain carpeting, causing the plaintiff to slip, catch her heel and fall, resulting in her injury.
There is no dispute as to the facts. They are shown by the transcript of the testimony taken in the common pleas court, which is in the record here. It consists of the testimony of the plaintiff herself and a witness who went with the plaintiff to the defendant’s theater to see the show. The defendant offered no proofs. Was the defendant guilty of negligence, as a matter of fact, in maintaining an unsafe con[663]*663dition in its theater? The common pleas judge decided that the defendant was guilty of such negligence, and entered judgment for the plaintiff.
On appeal to the circuit court, Circuit Judge Guy A. Miller, deciding the question without jury, held that the defendant was not guilty of negligence and set aside the judgment. In his opinion, which is in the record, the circuit judge, referring to our decision in Michael v. Kircher, 335 Mich 566, said:
“I think that the powers and duties of circuit judges in Wayne county in the determination of cases appealed to that circuit from the common pleas court of Detroit demand candid reconsideration and redetermination by the justices-of our State Supreme Court.
“This statement is based upon the wording of Rule No 77 of the Michigan Court Rules, § 17, as the application of that rule is made uncertain and unambiguous [ambiguous?] by the decision in the case of Michael v. Kircher, 335 Mich 566, at pages 573 and 574. * * * .
“The case of Michael v. Kircher involved a determination by the circuit court on the subject of the authority of an agent. On that point there was conflicting evidence before the common pleas judge. The circuit court reviewed all of the testimony and came to the conclusion that the ends of justice required that court to give a judgment differing from that of the common pleas court, which ought to have been given or made by the common pleas court. The Supreme Court held that it was reversible error for the circuit judge to differ with the opinion on conflicting evidence of the common pleas judge.”
Thereupon Judge Miller, in the case at bar, relying on Court Rule No 77, § 17, adopted September 22, effective September 23,1949, reversed the judgment entered in the common pleas court, and said:
[664]*664“Acting under the express provision of Court Rule No 77 above quoted, which gives to this court the power to render the judgment which should have been rendered, it is my conclusion that the evidence in this case fails to establish a cause of action.”
In so doing, the trial judge expressly relied on subdivisions (f) and (g) in said section 17, Court Rule No 77, which state:
“1. The circuit court may, at any time, in addition to its general powers, in its discretion and on such terms as it deems just; * * *
“(f) Draw inferences of fact, except in cases prohibited by statute;
“(g) Give any judgment and make any order which ought to have been given or made, and make such other and further orders and grant such relief, whether mentioned in the notice of appeal or not, as the case require.”
In Michael v. Kircher (1953), supra, at 573, 574, we discussed and passed upon the effect of Court Rule No 77 on the statute in question, and said:
“The circuit judge, in reversing the judgments entered in the common pleas court, relied on the testimony of Sadow as to the extent of his authority as agent for the appealing defendants. The testimony in these cases had been taken at the trial held in the common pleas court, transcribed and returned to the circuit court in accordance with the statute and court rules hereinafter referred to. The circuit judge held that Sadow had neither actual nor apparent authority to enter into these transactions as said appellees’ agent, and that his acts did not bind said appellees. In so doing, the circuit judge ignored the findings of fact made by the trial judge in the common pleas court, which were to the contrary.
“The review of the judgments for plaintiffs entered in the common pleas court was based on a transcript of the testimony and proceedings had in [665]*665the common pleas court. On such review, the circuit court does not hear the case de novo. PA 1929,. No 260, § 4 (CL 1948, § 728.4), providing for the review of judgments of the common pleas court by the circuit court, was amended by PA 1949, No 149 (Stat Ann 1951 Cum Supp § 27.3654), and provides as follows:
“ ‘In all cases in which any of the parties to the litigation feel themselves aggrieved by the judgment, or final order of a judge or judges of the common pleas court, appeal or certiorari shall lie within 20 days of the date of such judgment or order, to the circuit court of said county for review, but not for trial de novo, where the case shall be reviewed in the same manner as near as may be, as cases appealed from the circuit court are now reviewed in the Supreme Court. * * *
“ ‘Transcripts of judgments rendered by the common pleas court may be taken and filed in the same-manner and within the same time and with like force and effect as is provided by law.
“ ‘A reporter or stenographer may be employed in any case upon demand of either party to the case, or on order of the court.’
“See, also, Court Rule No 77, effective September 23, 1949, which defines the practice on appeals to-circuit courts from the common pleas court in Detroit, and substantially follows the rules for practice on appeals from circuit courts to this Court-Said Court Rule No 77 is not contradictory of the-statute above quoted, as applied to the question now before us. Such appeals are heard in the circuit court on settled records and filing of briefs. They are not heard de novo. * * *
* “Under the circumstances, the conclusion of the common pleas judge should not have been reversed unless the testimony taken in the common pleas court clearly preponderated in the opposite direction. It does not. The circuit judge erred.”
[666]*666In the case at har there was no conflicting testimony (none was offered by the defendant). The testimony preponderated in one direction. There was no cross-examination of the plaintiff, who testified as follows:
“As I was coming ont of the ladies’ lonnge I slipped on the step leading from the washroom leading into the rest room connected with the lonnge. I had stepped on the floor sill.
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Boyles, J.
I do not concur in affirmance.
This case originated in the common pleas court for Detroit and was tried before a judge of that court. Decision depended on a question of fact — was the defendant theater company guilty of negligence in failing to keep its premises in a safe condition to prevent injury to its patrons? Plaintiff was an invitee who was injured, and claims negligence of the defendant in permitting a wet, slippery substance to remain at a door leading into the ladies’ rest, room,, and a space to exist between the door and certain carpeting, causing the plaintiff to slip, catch her heel and fall, resulting in her injury.
There is no dispute as to the facts. They are shown by the transcript of the testimony taken in the common pleas court, which is in the record here. It consists of the testimony of the plaintiff herself and a witness who went with the plaintiff to the defendant’s theater to see the show. The defendant offered no proofs. Was the defendant guilty of negligence, as a matter of fact, in maintaining an unsafe con[663]*663dition in its theater? The common pleas judge decided that the defendant was guilty of such negligence, and entered judgment for the plaintiff.
On appeal to the circuit court, Circuit Judge Guy A. Miller, deciding the question without jury, held that the defendant was not guilty of negligence and set aside the judgment. In his opinion, which is in the record, the circuit judge, referring to our decision in Michael v. Kircher, 335 Mich 566, said:
“I think that the powers and duties of circuit judges in Wayne county in the determination of cases appealed to that circuit from the common pleas court of Detroit demand candid reconsideration and redetermination by the justices-of our State Supreme Court.
“This statement is based upon the wording of Rule No 77 of the Michigan Court Rules, § 17, as the application of that rule is made uncertain and unambiguous [ambiguous?] by the decision in the case of Michael v. Kircher, 335 Mich 566, at pages 573 and 574. * * * .
“The case of Michael v. Kircher involved a determination by the circuit court on the subject of the authority of an agent. On that point there was conflicting evidence before the common pleas judge. The circuit court reviewed all of the testimony and came to the conclusion that the ends of justice required that court to give a judgment differing from that of the common pleas court, which ought to have been given or made by the common pleas court. The Supreme Court held that it was reversible error for the circuit judge to differ with the opinion on conflicting evidence of the common pleas judge.”
Thereupon Judge Miller, in the case at bar, relying on Court Rule No 77, § 17, adopted September 22, effective September 23,1949, reversed the judgment entered in the common pleas court, and said:
[664]*664“Acting under the express provision of Court Rule No 77 above quoted, which gives to this court the power to render the judgment which should have been rendered, it is my conclusion that the evidence in this case fails to establish a cause of action.”
In so doing, the trial judge expressly relied on subdivisions (f) and (g) in said section 17, Court Rule No 77, which state:
“1. The circuit court may, at any time, in addition to its general powers, in its discretion and on such terms as it deems just; * * *
“(f) Draw inferences of fact, except in cases prohibited by statute;
“(g) Give any judgment and make any order which ought to have been given or made, and make such other and further orders and grant such relief, whether mentioned in the notice of appeal or not, as the case require.”
In Michael v. Kircher (1953), supra, at 573, 574, we discussed and passed upon the effect of Court Rule No 77 on the statute in question, and said:
“The circuit judge, in reversing the judgments entered in the common pleas court, relied on the testimony of Sadow as to the extent of his authority as agent for the appealing defendants. The testimony in these cases had been taken at the trial held in the common pleas court, transcribed and returned to the circuit court in accordance with the statute and court rules hereinafter referred to. The circuit judge held that Sadow had neither actual nor apparent authority to enter into these transactions as said appellees’ agent, and that his acts did not bind said appellees. In so doing, the circuit judge ignored the findings of fact made by the trial judge in the common pleas court, which were to the contrary.
“The review of the judgments for plaintiffs entered in the common pleas court was based on a transcript of the testimony and proceedings had in [665]*665the common pleas court. On such review, the circuit court does not hear the case de novo. PA 1929,. No 260, § 4 (CL 1948, § 728.4), providing for the review of judgments of the common pleas court by the circuit court, was amended by PA 1949, No 149 (Stat Ann 1951 Cum Supp § 27.3654), and provides as follows:
“ ‘In all cases in which any of the parties to the litigation feel themselves aggrieved by the judgment, or final order of a judge or judges of the common pleas court, appeal or certiorari shall lie within 20 days of the date of such judgment or order, to the circuit court of said county for review, but not for trial de novo, where the case shall be reviewed in the same manner as near as may be, as cases appealed from the circuit court are now reviewed in the Supreme Court. * * *
“ ‘Transcripts of judgments rendered by the common pleas court may be taken and filed in the same-manner and within the same time and with like force and effect as is provided by law.
“ ‘A reporter or stenographer may be employed in any case upon demand of either party to the case, or on order of the court.’
“See, also, Court Rule No 77, effective September 23, 1949, which defines the practice on appeals to-circuit courts from the common pleas court in Detroit, and substantially follows the rules for practice on appeals from circuit courts to this Court-Said Court Rule No 77 is not contradictory of the-statute above quoted, as applied to the question now before us. Such appeals are heard in the circuit court on settled records and filing of briefs. They are not heard de novo. * * *
* “Under the circumstances, the conclusion of the common pleas judge should not have been reversed unless the testimony taken in the common pleas court clearly preponderated in the opposite direction. It does not. The circuit judge erred.”
[666]*666In the case at har there was no conflicting testimony (none was offered by the defendant). The testimony preponderated in one direction. There was no cross-examination of the plaintiff, who testified as follows:
“As I was coming ont of the ladies’ lonnge I slipped on the step leading from the washroom leading into the rest room connected with the lonnge. I had stepped on the floor sill. There was wall-to-wall carpeting in the room to which I was going and when I slipped my heel canght in an open space in the carpeting between the sill of the floor. The wall-to-wall carpeting did not come right np or against the bottom of the floor sill and there was a space there. * * * When I was leaving the washroom and going into the ladies’ lounge there was nothing apparent to cause [call?] my attention to anything unusual on this floor sill. When I fell and was lying there my hands were full of some greasy substance that was on the sill. As I was walking through, the gap between the carpeting and the wall was not observable by ordinary observation.”
Nor can it now be said that Court Rule No 77 is contrary to the above-quoted statute and consequently must prevail. The statute declares that the review on appeal in the circuit court is not a trial de novo. In Michael v. Kircher, supra, we expressly said that Court Rule No 77 is not contradictory of the statute.
This leads to the actual and controlling issue here for decision — does the evidence adduced to prove, the plaintiff’s case establish a cause of action, and* in that respect does it clearly preponderate in the direction opposite to the findings of the common' pleas judge? The essential part of plaintiff’s testimony, hereinbefore quoted, has been sufficiently summarized by Justice Reid.
[667]*667Said testimony is here in the record in full. The circuit judge reviewed the testimony, without a jury. There is no question but that the plaintiff was an invitee in the defendant’s theater. Nor can there be any question as to the duty of the defendant to maintain its premises in a safe condition to prevent injury to the plaintiff. We have had occasions to decide that question, and also to decide whether the defendant’s negligence in failing to maintain the required safe place for an invitee is a question of fact.
In Coleman v. Washington Theatre Co., 294 Mich 343, the plaintiff, likewise an invitee in a moving picture theater, was injured by a fall claimed to be due to the. negligence of the theater owner. In affirming judgment for the plaintiff after verdict by jury we said (p 345):
“A moving picture theater is a place to which the publicas invited, and plaintiff had a right to presume that defendant’s picture house was maintained in a reasonably, safe condition as to lights, and had a right to pass along the aisle thereof with a reasonable assurance of its being in a safe condition. The fact that the premises were maintained in. a somewhat darkened condition might have given added assurance of its being reasonably safe. Branch v. Klatt, 165 Mich 666. In Emery v. Midwest Amusement & Realty Co., 125 Neb 54, 59 (248 NW 804), the Court said:
,«. “pin proper rule appears to be: “The proprietor of a place' of public amusement is required to use ordinary-or reasonable care to put and keep the premises, appliances, and amusement devices in a reasonably safe condition for persons attending; and if he fails to perform his duty in this regard, a patron • who is injured in consequence thereof is entitled to recover for the injury sustained.” ’
“The question of whether or not the-place where plaintiff fell was properly lighted was a'question for the jury.” (Italics supplied.)
[668]*668In Lane v. B & J Theatres, Inc., 314 Mich 666, the plaintiff also sued the defendant theater company for damages for personal injury resulting from negligence in maintaining a theater (failure to adequately light an aisle). The trial court granted the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s proofs. "We reversed and remanded for a new trial and in so doing, after citing and discussing several cases, the Court said (pp 671, 677):
“Plaintiff was an invitee and, while defendant was not an insurer of her safety, the duty rested on it, and its employees, to exercise reasonable care for her protection against injury in the theater. * * * Plaintiff on the record before us, was entitled to have the issues in the case submitted to the jury.” (Italics supplied.)
Nor was it necessary for the plaintiff, in order to recover damages, to show that the defendant had knowledge of the carpet condition which resulted in her injury. In the Lane Case, supra (p 673), the Court quoted with approval from Branch v. Klatt, 165 Mich 666, 670, 671, as follows:
“ ‘One would have a right to presume that the defendant had discharged his duty of having the premises in a reasonably safe condition, as to lights and construction; and the ordinary person would naturally suppose that it would be safe to pass along a passageway provided for his exit, with reasonable assurance of its being in a safe condition.’ ”
And in the Lane Case, supra (p 674), the Court also quoted with apparent approval as follows:
“ ‘The owner of a place of entertainment is charged with an affirmative positive obligation to know that the premises are safe for the public use.’ ”
Further, in Hulett v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 299 Mich 59 (injury caused by slipping on oil on a floor), at pp 66, 67, this Court said:
[669]*669“It was not necessary for plaintiff to prove defendant had actual or constructive knowledge of the hazardous condition of its floor, as the alleged negligence was the act of defendant in creating this condition. Defendant could not by its own act create a hazardous condition and then demand that plaintiff, who was injured as a result thereof, prove it had knowledge of such condition. Knowledge of the alleged hazardous condition created by defendant itself is inferred.”
See, also, Braman v. Stewart, 145 Mich 548; Cox v. United Detroit Theatres Corporation, 306 Mich 479.
In the case at bar the circuit judge, in his opinion on the appeal from the common pleas court, discussed at length the facts shown by the transcript of the testimony taken in the common pleas court, substituted his own judgment, for that of the common pleas court, and announced his own conclusions on the questions of fact in the face of contrary findings of fact by the common pleas court. In so doing, the judge employed this case as a medium to denounce the unanimous decision of this Court in' Michael v. Kircher, supra.
Repeating what was said in conclusion, in Michael v. Kircher, “the circuit judge erred.”
This Court on 2 occasions since Michael v. Kircher was decided, has again considered this matter and upheld the conclusions in that decision. It should be noted that in Cummins v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 337 Mich 629, there was conflicting testimony in the common pleas court, as a result of which we found that the evidence clearly preponderated against the finding and judgment of the common pleas court. That is not the situation in the instant case.
Also, in Kellar v. United Metal Products Co., 338 Mich 651. we again reaffirmed our decision in Michael [670]*670v. Kircher, supra, after quoting at length from that decision. In affirming a judgment for the plaintiff entered in the common pleas court, we held (syllabus) :
“The circuit court reviews judgment entered in the common pleas court on a transcript of the testimony and proceedings had in the common pleas court and does not hear the case de novo; the review being in the same manner, as near as may be, as cases appealed from the circuit court are presently reviewed by the Supreme Court (CL 1948, § 728.4, as amended by PA 1949, No 149; Court Rule No 77, effective in 1949).”
The testimony taken in the common pleas court appears here in the printed record, certified to by the circuit judge, together with appellant’s statement of the reasons and grounds of appeal from the circuit court to this Court. Said record further shows that a judgment of no cause for action was entered in favor of the defendant in the- circuit court. The appeal here was táken by the plaintiff from that judgment.
An order should be entered in this Court setting-aside the judgment of no cause for action entered in the circuit court, affirming the judgment of the common pleas court which was in favor of the plaintiff for $800 and costs of that court, and directing the circuit court to remand the same to the common pleas court for enforcement thereof.
Plaintiff may tax costs of the circuit court and of this appeal.
Reversed and remanded.
Dethmers, C. J., and Smith, Kelly, and Black, JJ., concurred with Boyles, J.