Gallin v. Polo Grounds Athletic Club

126 Misc. 550
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 126 Misc. 550 (Gallin v. Polo Grounds Athletic Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallin v. Polo Grounds Athletic Club, 126 Misc. 550 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Marks, J.

The plaintiff paid twenty-two dollars, the prescribed admission fee, for a reserved ringside seat at a boxing contest for the world’s heavyweight championship between one Dempsey and one Firpo at the Polo Grounds on the night of September 24, 1923. These grounds are laid out and used principally for baseball games. There is an amphitheatre there with rising tiers of seats arranged for individual use which prevents overcrowding. This amphitheatre will accommodate about 35,000 people, and the seats used by them are made of wood and metal and rest on and are fastened securely to the concrete floor of the structure.

But for this Dempsey-Firpo exhibition the defendant, which maintained, operated and controlled the Polo Grounds on the night in question, decided to use also the ball field, and placed thereon a series of benches divided into sections to seat about 20,000 additional spectators, and also placed on the ball field seats to accommodate between 10,000 and 15,000 additional spectators, which seats were constructed out of plain boards supported on each end by another board.

The benches for the accommodation of the additional 20,000 spectators above referred to were constructed entirely of wood, the lumber of each bench being one and three-quarters inches thick, and the general length was thirteen feet four inches, and seated about nine persons. The seat was constructed of two planks, one nine inches wide and the other four and one-half inches wide, the total width of the seat being thirteen and one-half inches. The seat and back of the bench were supported by wooden uprights resting on a base also made of wood two inches thick, four inches wide and eighteen inches long. This base rested upon the turf and was not fastened to the ground, and in my opinion was intended principally to prevent the legs or uprights of the benches from bearing into and spoiling the turf of the baseball field, one of the [552]*552rules of the owners of the baseball club being that the turf should not be spoiled. The bench was held together by nails.

The so-called ring in which the contest was fought was built on the ball field between the pitcher’s box and second base, and the benches were arranged all around this ring in sections.

In the section in which the plaintiff’s seat was located there were about 3,600 seats, divided into 400 of these wooden benches placed in about 100 rows. The space between the back of one bench and the front of another bench was only about fourteen inches. The bench on which the plaintiff was seated was about the twenty-fourth one from the ringside.

Mr. Rickard, under whose supervision this arena or ball field was used and who provided these temporary wooden benches, testified that he was one of the largest promoters of boxing exhibitions in the United States, having handled several of them; that this Dempsey-Firpo exhibition was a championship bout and that he knew from his former experience in giving such exhibitions that the spectators attended in the hope of seeing a “ knockout ” which, I assume, is a blow with his fist incased in a padded glove, designed to prevent injury, delivered by one of the contestants with such force and strength, however, to the body of his opponent as to render the recipient of this not over-gentle friendly tap unconscious or unfit to continue the contest.

Eagerly awaiting this knockout, when it occurs, as stated by Mr. Rickard, the crowd becomes very much excited and stand on the benches and break them; that he knew that even permanent benches had been broken by the crowd at another exhibition of the same kind; that the people at this Dempsey-Firpo exhibition went mad.

When Firpo hit Dempsey in the first round either knocking him out or almost knocking him out of the ring, the excitement and turmoil became so great that nearly everybody stood up shouting and yelling. The entire gathering was in an uproar. Hundreds of people stood upon the seats of the benches and upon the backs of benches, with one foot on the back of one bench and the other foot on the back of another bench, pulling one another and shouting and yelling, while others ran down the aisles to the ringside.

The back of the bench on which plaintiff was seated was broken off and it went down. The center of the bench broke and caved in, and the seat was splintered. The plaintiff was thrown to the ground and people fell on top of him. A friend of the plaintiff who sat with him on the same bench describes the scene as follows:

“ After a few knockdowns everybody was in a pitch of excitement, [553]*553but when Dempsey was knocked out of the ring the real commotion started and as well as I can remember now everybody was getting up on the benches and the next thing I knew we were pulled — the bench went over on us with us sitting on it, the other gentleman and myself, and we found ourselves in a heap and Mr. Gallin was very badly hurt and we picked him up.” He further stated that at that time when the plaintiff’s bench caved in “ a couple of rows went down at that time and there was a big turmoil, benches in front of us and in back of us went down. They either went backwards and the benches were lying down, some were smashed and some were just thrown backwards and people fell over with them because people stood up on the seats of the benches and they were very close together. They made as much as they possibly could of the ground — and when one bench went down and went back on the people back of them the other bench went down.”

The plaintiff sustained a fracture or dislocation of one of his fingers and abrasions and contusions to his face and shoulders. Plaintiff claimed that the cause of the accident was the use by the defendant of rotten lumber in making the benches, but this allegation he failed to prove. But he also claims that it was due to the failure of the defendant to use reasonable care in constructing said seats, and this charge in my opinion is supported by the evidence.

Judging from the vast multitude in attendance at this exhibition, about 70,000 or 80,000 people, a number greater than the combined population of several of the large cities in this State, and the prices charged for admission, the receipts may be safely estimated to have been $1,000,000.

If the' interest of so large a part of the public in this fistic encounter was so great that the amphitheatre of the Polo Grounds and the wooden benches of the bleachers used to accommodate the public at baseball games were not considered sufficient to accommodate all who desired to attend, and provision was made by the defendant to invite for gain and to seat about 20,000 additional spectators by placing benches in the ball field, the defendant is liable for neglect for failing to construct and place those additional seats so that they would be safe for the purpose for which it knew the public not only intended to use them, namely, for seating purposes, but for which it knew or should have known they would be likely to be used at times of great excitement, namely, to stand upon the seats and the backs of these benches.

These seats placed on the ball field on this occasion had been used before at a similar exhibition and had been used for seating [554]*554and standing purposes and were thus known to have been subjected to extraordinary weight, not improving their condition for a subsequent similar purpose.

The first consideration of the defendant should have been the safety of the public.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Misc. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallin-v-polo-grounds-athletic-club-nynyccityct-1926.