Malco Theatres, Inc. v. McLain

117 S.W.2d 45, 196 Ark. 188, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 16, 1938
Docket4-5069
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 117 S.W.2d 45 (Malco Theatres, Inc. v. McLain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malco Theatres, Inc. v. McLain, 117 S.W.2d 45, 196 Ark. 188, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 175 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Mehaffy, J.

On August 9, 1937, John D. McLain and Elsie McLain, husband and wife, filed their complaint in the Jackson circuit court against Malco Theatres, Inc., alleging that on January 17, 1937, they attended a picture show in Newport at the Strand Theatre operated by the appellant; that upon leaving the theatre and passing along the sidewalk the appellee, Elsie McLain, was, through the negligence and carelessness of the agents and servants of appellant, tripped and caused to fall upon the walk in front of appellant’s theatre, between the Strand Theatre and the fire house on Walnut street; that appellee’s injury was caused by the negligence and carelessness of appellant’s colored employee, James Patton.'

Appellant answered and denied every material allegation in the complaint and further pleaded in bar the contributory negligence of appellee, Elsie McLain.

There was a jury trial and a verdict in favor of the appellee in the sum of $2,500, but there was no verdict in favor of John I). McLain. Judgment ivas entered on said verdict, motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and this appeal is prosecuted by the appellant to reverse said judgment.

Dr. M. L. Harris testified that he had treated appellee for her injuries. She stated to witness that she had had a fall, and injured her leg. She had some bruises on her left leg and bruises on the right leg involving her knee and below. There were some bruises and abrasions, but her knee seemed to be the only place that was injured to amount to anything. Appellee’s husband came to witness’ office and said she was having a great deal of trouble with her knee; witness told him to put an elastic bandage on it, and the next time he saw her she had the bandage on her knee; the knee was still swollen, some on the inside. Two months ago witness put a brace on which appellee now wears. Witness took the measurement for the brace which had to be manufactured, and requires an extra kind of shoe. Witness testified at length as to the injury to appellee’s knee. There was no damage to the bone structure, but a partial thickening of the cartilage. Witness said that the X-ray picture showed no evidence of damage to the bone structure except on palpitation he still felt a softening on the inside of the knee. When asked whether there was an escape of fluid, he said there was fluid there, but he did not know where it came from, it might be from the joint or from the blood stream. He stated that one usually recovers in about three months. He cannot say whether, if Mrs. McLain had immediately gotten off her foot, she could have completely recovered in not to exceed six months; he prescribed rest, but does not know whether his instructions were followed. Witness made an X-ray picture at the solicitation of Guy Snow, manager of the theatre. He advised appellee’s husband that she would have to wear the bandage and have the rest; does not know whether Hr. Stephens has the X-ray. Mr. Snow sent over and got it one day and he has not seen it since. It was agreed that the X-ray might be introduced in evidence in the absence of Dr. Harris.

Appellee testified that she is 30 years old, her father has been dead almost 16 years, and she worked as a stenographer before she got married; taught two or three terms of school in the country; was married in December, 1927. She said that when they were coming out of the theatre a little after four O’clock it was sprinkling and there was a crowd coming out, and she picked up her son and held him on the left side and started on the way to the car; the ear was parked across the street near what was then Campbell’s Drug Store and when she was underneath the marque, or whatever it is over the Capitol Theatre, her husband got her to wait and let him carry the baby, and before she had a chance to stop she was tripped, and when she looked around could not see anything on the right side, and when she looked to the left side the negro pulled the brush handle from between her knees. Her husband picked her up and they went to the car; she was holding her baby when she fell; she said it was so unexpected that she could not catch herself, and the side of,her baby’s face was hurt. She was scared at the time, afraid of pneumonia; afraid her baby would get pneumonia; she had fallen on her knees and was hurting; she was hurting all that night and on Monday felt, so bad that she did not go to see the doctor, but on Tuesday she was hurting so bad that she went to the doctor and he prescribed hot towels and complete rest; she said it had to be complete rest because her knees were so sore; the doctor advised her it would be better in two or three weeks, but in that time it was not any better and she asked her husband to go and see the doctor; the doctor said it would take a little time; when she moved her knee up and down it was always painful; there was pain in walking, and she stayed off of it as much as she could; she went to see the doctor the first part of April, and it was paining her and was getting awful and she was getting awfully worried about it; the doctor told her to put an elastic support around the knee; that it would help relieve the pain and it did for a while; she spent most of the spring and summer just lying around trying' to keep the knee straight so it would not hurt; she went back to the doctor in June because it had not healed as well as she thought it should heal, and the doctor told her if it did not get better she would have to wear a brace and go on crutches; the next time she went back in July or August measurements were made for her brace, and it took about five weeks to get the shoes; on September 6, she put the brace on and has had to wear it since; she is now wearing’ the brace, and by request of counsel exhibited it to the jury; she has to wear it all the time to keep the knee from moving; it lessens the pain; she does not suffer pain in moving’ it when the brace is on; her health was good before the injury and she had suffered no other injury; she has to rest a great deal; her family has to help her with the work; before getting the brace it bothered her day and night; when she was tripped she fell on her knees on the concrete sidewalk; she did not see the brush until she was tripped and the negro pulled it from between her knees; the negro was engaged in brushing the posters there; there were posters for the picture show in front of the old Capitol Theatre. She and her husband and child left the theatre at the end of the first show; the child is an adopted child and a little past five years old; she was asked on cross-examination if she was not trying to protect her head and hat from the weather; she said she was not thinking anything about her hat; she was going along real fast with her head down next to the baby; if there were other people on the sidewalk she does not remember it; the car was beyond the Capitol Theatre building; she did not remember seeing the negro until after she fell, and does not remember what he had besides a brush; she has a vague remembrance of a paste bucket or something else; she did not get up immediately, nor until her husband came and Jielpecl lier; she said nothing to the negro boy; they were not building a new house at that time, but had completed it and moved into it the October before. Asked if she did her own work she said yes, the family helped and a great portion was neglected; she continued to do her work with the help of the family; in addition to her husband, the little boy and herself, she has her brother who is staying with her and going to school, and he helped before and after going to school. In the fall her dress was torn and her hose was torn at the knee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.2d 45, 196 Ark. 188, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malco-theatres-inc-v-mclain-ark-1938.