Lasell v. Tri-States Theatre Corp.

11 N.W.2d 36, 233 Iowa 929
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 21, 1943
DocketNo. 46250.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 36 (Lasell v. Tri-States Theatre Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lasell v. Tri-States Theatre Corp., 11 N.W.2d 36, 233 Iowa 929 (iowa 1943).

Opinions

Bliss, J.

Appellant’s assignments of error are based upon erroneous instructions and the failure to properly instruct the jury. The appellee contends that if it be conceded the trial court so erred, it was error without prejudice, since its motion to direct a verdict because the appellant had failed to establish either negligence on the part of appellee or her own freedom from contributory negligence should have been sustained. If there is merit in the appellee’s contention, it is decisive of this appeal and makes it unnecessary to pass upon the merits of the errors assigned. Some review of the record is therefore first required.

The appellant, aged sixty-four years, weighing at the time about 223 pounds, accompanied by her daughter and the latter’s daughter, having paid the required admission, entered the Des Moines Theater, operated by the appellee, about five o’clock in the afternoon of June 8, 1941, to attend a moving-picture show. Patrons, after passing through the entrance traverse the lobby, foyer, and promenade, in succession, before taking their seats in the auditorium. The auditorium is approximately one hundred feet east and west, and probably somewhat farther north and south, from its rear to the screen at the north end. The main or ground floor of the auditorium con *932 sists of four sections of seats, the two center sections having forty rows of seats and the side sections having two or three rows less. There are five aisles extending from the rear north to the screen aisle, number 1 being along the west wall and the other aisles being numbered consecutively to the aisle along the east wall. The entire floor of the auditorium extends from the stage toward the rear, south, on a gradually rising gradient or incline, until it reaches the third row of seats from the rear wall of the auditorium. From the elevation of this line, the level of the aisles gradually slopes downward toward the aisle entrances and coincides with the floor level of the promenade. But the level of the floor under the last three rows of seats in the auditorium, and between those parts of the aisles which slope southward and down, continues on a rising incline to the rear wall. As a result of this method of construction the passageway to the seats in the third row from the rear is on the same level as the aisle and there is no step-up from the aisle into this passageway. But to enter the passageway to the seats in the second row from the back there is a step-up of approximately five inches, which continues as a ramp or upward-sloping way, for a short distance into the passageway. Entrance from the aisle into the-last row at the rear of the auditorium is in like manner except that the step-up is somewhat higher.

Appellant and her daughter and granddaughter entered the auditorium at aisle 2, the second from the west wall. An usher, with a flashlight, seated them in the second row from the rear, in the section of seats on the left or west of this aisle. The granddaughter sat in the third seat from the aisle, the appellant -in the second seat from the aisle, and the daughter in the seat on the aisle and just over the step-up. None of them had any difficulty in taking her seat, and the appellant testified that she did not notice the step-up. The usher did not call their attention to the step-up. Other patrons were passing along the aisle as they came in. Patrons were entering and leaving the auditorium throughout the entertainment. The picture was shown, as is customary, in partial darkness. After they had been in the theater for about three hours, the daughter went to the rest room. She almost fell in stepping to the aisle but retained her balance. About five or ten minutes later the appellant *933 took hold of the granddaughter’s hand with her left hand and stepped toward the aisle. Not seeing the step-down because of darkness, and not knowing of its presence, and thinking there was no change in level of the floor on which she was walking, she lost her balance when her foot went to the aisle floor, and she fell forward, striking her head on the metal seat across the aisle. She had never been in this theater before.

Her petition alleged negligence thus:

“The proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries and damages was the negligence of the defendant in negligently permitting an uneven condition in its floor to exist, over which patrons would be likely to stumble and fall, with insufficient lighting and without warning of the danger. ’ ’

The petition was in no way attacked. The answer was a general denial.

There was uncontradicted evidence that the riser of this step and about two inches in width of its tread had been repainted with white enamel paint about -the end of April 1941. There was also evidence that it was repainted as it became soiled, darkened, or worn off, but no evidence of its being painted between April 1941 and June 8, 1941, the day of the injury. After taking her mother to the hospital, the daughter came back to the theater to get the name of the gentleman who1 had aided her mother after she fell, and to make some observations. She testified:

“The theáter was dark and then the promenade was a little lighter and the main entrance was real light. When I left to go up to the rest room I didn’t see the edge of the aisle and when you sit there awhile you forget about anything. When I went out of there, I staggered myself, I happened to catch myself. At that time I didn’t notice any aisle lights but I know there is lights there. I did not observe any whitewashing or any white paint on the edge of the floor where it joins the aisle floor. When we were first ushered into the theater the usher did not state to Mrs. LaSell, nor me, nor any of the three of us to take note of the stepoff there. No one said anything to us upon our entrance into that theater, with reference or regard to the stepoff at the point where we were ushered into our seats. ’ ’

*934 On cross-examination she testified:

“I never seen any white stuff on there. I looked afterwards but I didn’t see anything. If there was white stuff there at the time, it was awfully dirty, you couldn’t see it. The light was so bad you couldn’t see in there. I didn’t look at the step when I stumbled but I did afterwards, that night. * * * I didn’t examine it very thoroughly when I went back, but I did see there was a step there. * * * As to the carpet in front of the step, you couldn’t see the carpet. I never seen any lights at that place. The lights were scattered up and down the aisle. I don’t say there were no lights there at that time because I didn’t see any. I didn’t see the step there or I wouldn’t have stumbled myself. * * * I never thought of looking down when I was leaving. I didn’t think of an uneven floor, didn’t think there was any necessity of it.”

The appellant testified:

“When we went into the Des Moines Theater I was ushered to my seat by an usher there. He had a flashlight. It cast a light on the floor so you could see to get to -the seat. * * * Within the place where the audience watches the show the interior was quite dark, just real dim lights.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.W.2d 36, 233 Iowa 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasell-v-tri-states-theatre-corp-iowa-1943.