Management Services, Inc. v. Hellman

289 S.W.2d 711, 40 Tenn. App. 127, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 24, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 289 S.W.2d 711 (Management Services, Inc. v. Hellman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Management Services, Inc. v. Hellman, 289 S.W.2d 711, 40 Tenn. App. 127, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

HOWARD, J.

Referring to- the parties as they appeared below, this action was filed by the Administrator herein, George Heilman, Jr., against the defendant, Management Services, Inc., for damages for the alleged *131 wrongful death of plaintiff’s minor son, William Kent Hellman, age 8 years, who died as a result of an injury sustained under circumstances hereinafter appearing. The suit was for the use and benefit of Hellman and his wife, Mary ft. Hellman, the surviving parents of the decedent.

The record discloses that prior to and on July 12,1952, the defendant operated a large swimming pool at Oak Eidge, Tennessee, where daily during the summer season several hundred adults and children paid regular entrance fees to sun bathe and swim. The pool was hexagon shaped and was surrounded by a concrete apron several feet wide on which patrons could walk or lounge, and surrounding the entire area was a high wire mesh or cyclone fence. On the concrete apron, but located at different points around the pool, were 5 or 6 life guard towers several feet high, from which the life guards had a clear view of the pool and surroundings. On the east side of the pool near the entrance were bath houses and the two diving boards, and on the north there was a beach and grassy plot, the water in this area of the pool being shallow for small children and those who could not swim. Prior to opening the pool on June 1, 1952, the defendant closed off the western area of the pool to the public by tying ropes across the spaces of approximately 4 feet between the fence and the two westernmost life guard towers on the north and south sides of the pool. These ropes were about the size of an ordinary window sash cord and were from 3 to 3% feet above the concrete apron, and there were no signs or warnings to the public that this area had been closed off.

On the date of the accident about 4 P.M., Hellman, accompanied by his wife, their 16 year old daughter, Anna *132 Gale, and her friend Glenda Shook, also age 16, their son, George, age 11, and the decedent, went to the defendant’s swimming pool for an onting, all of them dressing in their bathing suits before leaving home, and on reaching the pool Heilman paid the required entrance fees for the entire party. After being in the water for some time the decedent, who could not swim, complained of being cold and his father took him out to get a towel to put around his shoulders. Thereafter while they were standing on the concrete apron near the high diving board watching the divers, the decedent asked his father’s permission to move closer (south) to the low diving board where children his age were swimming and diving, which permission was granted. Thereafter, Heilman remained near the high diving board where he could observe his wife and other members of his family on the north side of the pool. Meantime he did not see the movements of his son who stopped for only a short time at the low diving board before he started running in a westwardly direction on the concrete apron, with the apparent intention of going around the westei'n area of the pool to the north side to join his mother, and on reaching the westernmost life guard tower he ran into the rope heretofore described, which cut off the unused portion of the pool. On striking the rope the decedent was knocked to the concrete apron, his head striking the pavement, causing him to suffer a skull fracture extending from the back of his right eye to the upper portion of his ear. Several hours after the accident other complications developed and a blood clot more than an inch in thickness formed on the child’s brain. This resulted in unconsciousness and an operation followed at the Oak Ridge Hospital, during which he died at 2 A.M. on the morning of July 13th.

*133 Plaintiff’s declaration alleges in substance that the defendant’s agents were negligent in placing or stretching the rope, without warning signs attached thereto, across the passageway at such height as to strike plaintiff’s son about the neck or chin, thereby stopping his forward movement and throwing him back onto the concrete pavement with great force; that the defendant was negligent in failing to warn its patrons and more particularly plaintiff’s son of the presence of said rope, and that the defendant’s agents knew or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known that the placing and maintaining of the rope across the passageway was dangerous and created a dangerous condition. ■

Upon being ordered to plead its defenses specially, the defendant filed the following special pleas:

“That the swimming pool * * was constructed and maintained so as to meet and fully comply with the highest standards of safety pertaining to public swimming pools * *
. “That at the time * * * that portion of the pool * * * closed to the public had been roped off and signs placed upon the ropes notifying the public that portions had been closed. A rope had been placed ¿cross the walkway surrounding the pool near the southwest portion thereof and stretched ■ from the lifeguard stand to the fence enclosing the- entire pool. Attached to this rope, which was plainly visible to persons using the pool, was a large metal .sign with black painted letters on a white background reading ‘This Section of Pool Closed’. That this sign, which was attached to the rope heretofore mentioned, was also plainly visible.”
*134 “That the closing of portions of public swimming-pools to the public by roping off a portion thereof and the placing of signs upon said ropes is a recognized thing the country over and that in so doing this defendant was acting in full compliance with the highest standards of safety pertaining to the operation of public swimming pools.”

The defendant specifically denied that it was under any duty to warn plaintiff’s son or “any other person present of said rope”; denied that he struck the rope about his neck or chin, or that he was thrown with great force onto the concrete, and denied that he died from “injuries wrongfully inflicted on him by this defendant.”

The defendant also relied upon the decedent’s contributory negligence, the contributory negligence of his parents for whose use and benefit the suit was brought, and upon a rule prohibiting patrons from running upon the premises, averring as follows:

“At approximately 5:45 P. M. on the day in question, the boy left his father and traveled in a westwardly direction along and over the apron surrounding the pool. At a point along the way the boy began to run and a lifeguard on duty reached for his whistle to warn the boy not to run. The boy fell. Personnel employed at the pool immediately went to the assistance of the child who was crying and holding his forehead, but who had no discernable marks, bruises, cuts or abrasions about his head, body, or limbs. Thereafter the boy joined his father who for sometime had been standing at a point some 100 feet away from the place where the boy fell.”

*135

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.2d 711, 40 Tenn. App. 127, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/management-services-inc-v-hellman-tennctapp-1955.