Guy v. Tri-State Amusement Co.

7 Ohio App. 509, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 77, 28 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 231, 28 Ohio C.A. 231, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 202
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ohio App. 509 (Guy v. Tri-State Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guy v. Tri-State Amusement Co., 7 Ohio App. 509, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 77, 28 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 231, 28 Ohio C.A. 231, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 202 (Ohio Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Farr, J.

This is a proceeding in error brought to reverse a judgment of the court of common pleas of this county and the parties sustain the same relation here as in tl|e court below. On the 17th day of December, 1916, Malinda Guy, the plaintiff in error, filed her petition in the court below seeking to recover from The Tri-State Amusement Company for an alleged violation of Sections 12940 and 12941 of the General Code, which provide that there shall be no denial of privileges at inns and certain other places, to a citizen, by reason of color, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens regardless of color.

[510]*510The plaintiff alleges in her petition that on or about the 1st day of August,' 1916, she went into Olympic Theater in the City of Steubenville in company with one Isaac E. Stady, a colored man and a theological student of Wilberforce University, she herself being a colored woman. She further alleges in her petition that she purchased two tickets at the price of ten cents each; that she surrendered the tickets to the person at the entrance, passed into the theater, and was seated in the fifth row, the second seat in, in the center tier of seats; that the usher approached her and requested her to abandon her seat and be seated on the right-hand side or in the right-hand tier of seats in said theater.

It is further alleged in the petition that she left said theater surrendering her tickets at the window where she had received them. To this petition an answer is filed by the defendant company, the defendant in error here, stating or admitting that it had rules and regulations providing for the conduct of people within said theater and that it was the duty of its usher or ushers to show people to their seats in said theater, but denying that there had been any •discrimination against Malinda Guy or Isaac E. Stady by reason of their color. The cause came on to tie heard and was tried to a jury. There was a verdict for the defendant and judgment upon the verdict, to which error is prosecuted in this court.

As above stated the action below is predicated on Sections 12940 and 12941, of the General Code. The former section reads as follows: ■

“Whoever, being the proprietor or his employe, keeper or manager of an inn, restaurant, eating [511]*511house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of color or race, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof, or, being a person who aids or incites the denial thereof, shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days, or both.”

And the latter section provides as follows:

“Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the person aggrieved thereby to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed.”

The petition below sought to recover under and by favor of this latter section. Mrs. Guy says that she purchased said tickets for admission on said, evening of August first; entered said theater, surrendered the tickets, went down five rows from' the rear of the theater, and sat down in the second seat in from the aisle' in the central section of seats; that soon after she had taken her seat she looked back and saw her companion, Mr. Stady, conversing with the usher, Mr. Russell, who came to her a few minutes later and asked her in a genteel manner to take a seat on the other side, designating the right-hand side of the theater; that she asked the usher why, and he said again, “Will you kindly take a seat on the right-hand side of the theater?” She again interrogated him to know why, and he [512]*512said “On account of your color.” This testimony is substantially corroborated by Mr. Stady. He says that he had a conversation with the same usher and was going to sit with his companion, Mrs. Guy; when the usher forbade him to do so, and he then said he had gone to the theater in company with her and he wished to sit with her. The usher said that he could not do so in the center section, and that he must be seated on the right-hand side of the theater. Mrs. Guy then returned to where Mr. Stady was, and .the two left the theater together but later returned in company with a friend, who had some conversation with the usher with reference to the; matter. It is not denied that the usher stated that he had invited the two colored persons to be seated on the right-hand side of the theater on account of their color.

If there were any denial of that fact the record settles it once and' for all at page 36, in the examination of Mr. Russell, who was the usher on that •occasion. He says: “I said, kindly remove to the other side of the house. She said, Why? I said, On account of your color.” So that Mr. Russell admits that the request for the removal to the .right side of the auditorium was because they were colored persons.

It is urged in argument that The Tri-State Amusement Company, operating this theater, had ■the right to make such reasonable rules and regulations as they saw fit to make with reference to the seating of persons in the same, and that they were permitted to make a rule authorizing or requiring their usher to show people to seats within their theater. There can be no question but [513]*513what such rules would «be permissible under the law of this state. However, it must be noted from said Section 12940 that it is provided that all citizens regardless of color or race shall have the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof, that is, at inns, theaters, places of amusement and other places ■enumerated in said statute.

The matter of these people being seated within the theater was a privilege and if this section of the General "Code is rightly understood, it is not simply a privilege of seeing the pictures or hearing the music or meeting and greeting their friends but all patrons are entitled to fully enjoy alike all the privileges accorded to patrons within the theater.

It might be contended here that these persons had just as good an opportunity to see the pictures or vaudeville performance, if such there may have been, seated on the right-hand side, as if-they were seated in the center section. However, if these colored people were required to be so seated they would only be allowed partial enjoyment of the privileges of that theater, , because white persons were permitted to occupy the center section; that is to say, colored people could enjoy the privilege of seeing the pictures, they could enjoy the privilege of hearing the music, they might enjoy the privilege of greeting their friends and acquaintances within the building, at the same time they were certainly denied some of the privileges that were given to persons of the white race, because the latter might enjoy the privilege of the center section of seats.

[514]*514For- instance if two persons of the white race had purchased tickets for a like consideration and seated themselves in -the center section of seats, under the rules and regulations of this theater, they would not have been called upon to have taken seats on th¿ left-hand side or right-hand side.

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7 Ohio App. 509, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 77, 28 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 231, 28 Ohio C.A. 231, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guy-v-tri-state-amusement-co-ohioctapp-1917.