Healey v. Playland Amusements, Inc.

199 So. 682
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1941
DocketNo. 17469.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 So. 682 (Healey v. Playland Amusements, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healey v. Playland Amusements, Inc., 199 So. 682 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

This is a suit by Charles S. Healey for damages in the sum of $4,000 for assault and battery alleged to have been committed upon his person by agents of the defendant, Playland Amusements, Inc. The defendant denied responsibility upon the ground that the plaintiff was the aggressor and upon the further ground that the party who struck plaintiff was not acting within the scope of his employment.

There was judgment below in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000 and defendant has appealed. Plaintiff has answered the appeal and asks that the damages be increased to the amotmt prayed for.

The defendant corporation operates what is called an amusement concession at Pontchartrain Beach and referred to in the testimony as “Laff-in-the-Dark”. Defendant’s counsel, however, describes his client’s business as “Laugh-and-Ride” which he says is “a museum containing various weird animated exhibits, called 'stunts’ (such as a devil, a dragon, and a skeleton) intended to startle but not really alarm patrons, who ride through the museum seated in small cars running on a miniature electric tramway. The building was kept in total darkness except that lights automatically illuminated each stunt as a car approached — and after the car passed the lights were extinguished. Partitions were so arranged that lights at one stunt would not illuminate other parts of the building”. For. convenience we will adopt the euphemism of counsel and refer to defendant’s establishment as a “museum”.

On the evening of June 20th, 1939, the plaintiff, a twenty-two year’old dental student of Loyola University, in company with his father and mother, his young sister, Dorothy, and her friend and guest, June Sapienza from Birmingham, Alabama, went to Pontchartrain Beach. Young Healey bought three tickets to the “museum” and he and the two girls attempted to enter one of the cars in which the patrons are transported. .They were told that only two persons could ride in one car so Dorothy and June entered the first car and the plaintiff the next one. They had passed several of the “stunts” and'as they approached one known as the “Devil” a flashlight was thrown in young Healey’s face. When he attempted to grab the flashlight dr knock it away he was struck from behind, and pulled out of the car, which was knocked off the track by the violence of Healey’s assailants. Two men seized Healey, one on each side of, him. In'struggling with his captors in complete darkness, the derailment of the car having' blown a fuse and extinguished whatever light there was, he struck one of them in the mouth, but was finally subdued and with one man holding each arm he was escorted from the building through a door in the rear of the structure to a storeroom or office maintained by the defendant corporation, where he was forced into a chair and struck in the face by one man and as he attempted to arise from the chair by another.

Richard J. Batt, the secretary-treasurer of defendant corporation, who was in the office at the time Healey was brought in, did not witness the assault because he had *684 gone in search of a police officer. When Batt returned with the officer Healey was taken Out of the storeroom by the officer. As they walked-along, they were met by Dr. and Mrs. Healey, who had become very much worried over the failure of Charles to return with the girls and had made a search for him in the building and about its environment in an effort to locate their son.

The defendant in explanation of the occurrence offered testimony to the effect that several nights before Healey visited their place of business their property had been damaged by acts of vandalism apparently committed by patrons of the establishment. The two men who grabbed Healey out of the car when it reached the “Devil” were placed there for the purpose of preventing further depredation and these men, William Wagnon and Frank Kramer, say that as Healey neared the “Devil” he leaned forward out of his seat with his arm extended in front of him and that they concluded that he' meant to do some harm to the “Devil”. Healey says that he had his arm in front of his face protecting his eyes, but that he did not lean forward in a menacing attitude towards the “Devil”. It appears that one of the “stunts” through which the customers passed consisted of a number of strings or threads which brushed against their faces. It was to prevent any other strings from possibly injuring his eyes that young Healey, according to his statement, placed his arm in front of his face.

Defendant’s counsel deny that Healey was hit more than once while in the storeroom. However, Kramer, who had removed Healey from the “museum” testified that he struck him when he was seated in the chair in the storeroom because, he felt some blood trickling down from his mouth as a result of the blow he received while in the “museum” and because he was afraid that Healey was going to hit him again and James Duffy, another employee of the defendant, says that he also hit Hea-ley while he was in the storeroom because, “I thought he was going to hit me”.

Healey states that he was rendered unconscious from the blows received in the storeroom but he is uncorroborated by any of the witnesses except Kramer, who admits that while Healey was sitting down he struck him as hard as he could' and knocked him dizzy.

It is said that Healey was a strong young man, six foot two inches tall, weighing one hundred and sixty pounds, whereas the employees of the defendant were small men about five and one-half feet tall and with little physical strength and that they were, therefore, incapable of doing much harm with their fists. In normal health, .Healey, who was much taller than his assailants, was, no doubt, quite robust, but he had barely recuperated from a spell of illness. Moreover, he was taken in custody by two men who, whatever their physical condition, succeeded in overpowering the struggling young man and, according to their own statement, forced him to accompany them to their employer’s office very much against his will. Counsel say that Healey was the aggressor and cannot recover damages as a result of the difficulty which he provoked. Oakes v. H. Weil Baking Company, 174 La. 770, 141 So. 456; Russo v. Orpheum Theatre & Realty Co., 136 La. 24, 66 So. 385, L.R.A.1915B, 1119; Jumonville v. Frey’s, Inc., La.App., 173 So. 227.

But Healey was not the aggressor. He was a patron of defendant, quietly seated in its moving car in the darkened building, seeking the amusement afforded by the various “stunts” when a flashlight was thrust out of the darkness into his face. Such an experience was well calculated to startle anyone in those surroundings and it was quite natural for him to attempt to knock the flashlight out of his face and to repel the assault by force, particularly after having been struck in the back of the neck.

Healey’s captors doubtless thought that they had discovered some one who was about to damage their employer’s property, perhaps one of the miscreants that had been committing the acts of- vandalism. It may be that the position of Healey’s arm had something to do with convincing them that he intended some mischief. He was in his shirt sleeves and hatless, which we are informed by the record and by our own observation, is not an unusual attire for college students. Nevertheless, he was very neatly clothed and there was nothing to indicate that he was not thoroughly respectable.

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199 So. 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healey-v-playland-amusements-inc-lactapp-1941.