Henry v. Publix Theatres Corp.

25 S.W.2d 695
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1930
DocketNo. 10661.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 695 (Henry v. Publix Theatres Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry v. Publix Theatres Corp., 25 S.W.2d 695 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

Appellant, Jean Henry, instituted this suit in a district court of Dallas County against appellee, Publix Theatres Corporation, to recover damages for personal injuries received while attending a moving picture performance in the Palace Theatre, a building operated by appellee. At the conclusion of appellant's testimony, the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee under peremptory instruction by the court. Appellant has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court. The following is a sufficient statement of the case for an understanding of the issues discussed:

Appellant attended an evening performance at appellee's theater, in company with a young man as an escort, who purchased tickets for them at the price charged for such performance. They entered the theater building, and were escorted by an usher to a seat on the lower floor near the rear of such building, and approximately under the front of the balcony, or second story of the building. This balcony was about 20 feet above the lower floor. Appellant and her escort entered the building a short time after 6 o'clock p. m. After the performance had proceeded for some time, a girl, Mary Lou Bills, fell from the balcony and struck appellant with her body across the neck and shoulders, painfully and seriously injuring her. The evidence discloses that Mary Lou Bills had entered the theater about 4 p. m. of the same afternoon, in company with another girl of about her age, they being about fifteen years of age, and had remained therein during the entire time. They were seated in the front row of the balcony, just above appellant. This girl was not a witness at this trial, though it was shown, on the cross-examination of appellant, that she had testified as a witness for appellant at a previous trial of the case, and was now residing in the city. Her companion testified at this trial to the effect that, immediately before her fall from the balcony, Mary Lou Bills arose from her seat in a standing position, and stated that she was going to get a drink of water. Immediately after this statement the witness turned to recover her purse that had dropped, and, while doing so, heard a scream, looked over the rail, and saw Mary Lou Bills as she was falling below. The description given of the position of the body of Mary Lou Bills is very meager, but the inference from such description is that she was falling in an outstretched position, with her hands extended and her body parallel to the floor. Another witness corroborated the statement as to the position of the body while it was falling.

Around the end of this balcony there is a railing to protect patrons in the balcony from stepping off or falling therefrom. This railing rests on a base, and the height from the floor of the balcony to the top of the railing is 29 inches; the height of the base being 16 inches and that of the railing proper 13 inches. The width of the aisle, forming a passageway for those occupying the front row of seats in the balcony, is 17 inches from the end of the seat to the side of the base. The testimony is that the knees of one "crumpling down in the seat" would touch the base. There were other people in the front row of the balcony, but as to the number the record does not show, other than that the balcony itself, which has ten rows of seats *Page 697 and fourteen seats to the row, was from one-half to three-fourths filled. The lower floor of the theater appears to have been fairly filled.

It appears that at the time of the fall of Mary Lou Bills a rather thrilling part of the play was being shown, and all those who testified had their eyes and their minds on the performance until arrested by the scream. At that time, the evidence is that the theater was so darkened that the escort of appellant did not see her for some little time after she had been hurt, and, when seen, she was in a "crumpled-up position" on the floor. While the evidence does not disclose that this darkness extended to the balcony, the only inference to be drawn is that such was the case, and we find as a fact that at the time Mary Lou Bills stood up from her seat in the balcony, for the purpose of momentarily leaving such seat, the balcony was in darkness.

While appellant was being cross-examined, it was disclosed that there had been a previous trial, and appellee introduced in evidence a paragraph from an abandoned petition, upon which petition the previous trial was had. This paragraph of said petition alleged, in effect, that, because of the insufficient ventilation and the negligent control of the heating of the theater on the occasion in question, Mary Lou Bills was caused to become ill and fainted, which caused her to fall from the balcony to the lower floor. The allegation of negligence in this respect was abandoned in the amended petition on which this trial was had.

In cross-examination of one of the medical witnesses called by appellant, it was shown that such physician had received a history of appellant's injury, and that he understood from such history that a girl had fainted in the balcony of the theater and had fallen upon the neck and shoulders of appellant. It is not stated from whom he received this history.

The negligence alleged by appellant in the amended petition is to the effect that the railing around the balcony was too low to constitute a support for the hand or body to prevent falling, if a person using the aisle next to the railing should become overbalanced, and the aisle or passageway next to the railing is so narrow that a safe exit could not be made by one seated in the front row of the balcony, and that, by reason of such narrowness of the aisle and the low height of the railing, a passage from the front seat was rendered difficult and dangerous, that the appellee was guilty of negligence in maintaining the balcony in such a dangerous condition, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of the falling of Mary Lou Bills and the injury to appellant.

Certain ordinances of the city of Dallas, prescribing the minimum width for aisles in theaters and other public buildings, were pleaded by appellant, but this pleading was stricken out on exceptions by appellee. It was alleged in this pleading that the aisle in question was substantially of less width than is permitted to be maintained by such city ordinances.

The action of the trial court, in taking the case from the jury and giving peremptory instruction in favor of appellee, can be sustained only on one of two theories, to wit, either that the evidence is insufficient to raise an issue of appellee's negligence, or that, if such issue is raised by the evidence and resolved in appellant's favor, such negligence, as a matter of law, was not the proximate cause of appellant's injury.

As the operator of a public theater, to the performance of which all persons were invited to attend on the payment of the admission price, appellee is charged with the duty to exercise ordinary care for the safety of those who respond to its invitation and attend such performance. To every such person there is an implied warranty by appellee that such care has been exercised for his safety. A breach of this duty by appellee will constitute negligence. If an attendant to a performance given in its theater should receive an injury proximately resulting from such negligence, the appellee would be responsible to the injured party for the damages suffered. When appellant entered the theater on the occasion in question, and was seated by an usher at a place immediately under the front end of the balcony, appellee thereby assured her that the seat could be occupied during the performance with reasonable safety to herself.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-publix-theatres-corp-texapp-1930.