Mattox v. Isley

245 P.2d 664, 111 Cal. App. 2d 774, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1952
DocketCiv. 18972
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 245 P.2d 664 (Mattox v. Isley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mattox v. Isley, 245 P.2d 664, 111 Cal. App. 2d 774, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*776 MOORE, P. J.

Howard Mattox, 3 years and 10 months of age, accompanied by his parents attended the theater of appellants on the evening of July 12, 1950. Although the auditorium had been opened at 6 :45 p. m., the trio did not arrive until a few minutes after 7 o’clock. After entering they hesitated for a few moments at the head of the aisle for an usher to serve them. None appearing, they went forward and chose seats in the 17th row from the rear. The father occupied the fifth chair from the aisle, the mother sat in the fourth, and Howard next to her. The two seats to his right and the one directly in front of the child remained unoccupied throughout the evening.

About an hour after their arrival Howard fell to the floor, cried and screamed loudly. His mother gathered him into her arms and rested his head upon the father’s lap. She promptly discovered blood running down her arm and speedily rushed the child to the lobby where, it was found, a gash had been cut across the bridge of his nose. No physician being at once available, the parents transported the child to a nearby emergency hospital where an antitetanus remedy was administered and the cut was sutured with seven stitches. The child was then removed to his home.

Mr. Mattox returned to the theater where, after the programmed films had been completed, he and Mr. Rock, assistant manager, undertook to locate the spot where Howard had fallen in order to determine the instrumentality that had caused the wound. Having failed of his purpose then he and Mrs. Mattox returned to the theater on July 19 to inspect the chairs again but found no change in their condition. However, with the advantage of daylight they reexamined the third seat from the aisle in the 18th row and found its wooden back pushed forward out of line and the metal band which had connected it with the adjoining chair protruding into the aisle, so that a sharp edge extended out about 20 inches from the floor. Further inspection disclosed many other seats throughout the theater suffered the same defect. The same observation had been made by Mr. Rock repeatedly after his inspections of the theater.

The protruding band is, normally, bolted to the back of the adjoining seat and at its center is secured to the “seat standard,” which is a metal frame between the seats and is anchored to the concrete floor. The seat standard serves as a frame and support for the seat on either side and as the base for the armrest between the seats.

*777 Respondent predicated his action for damages upon the negligence of appellants in permitting the sharp metal band to continue protruding and contended that he struck his head upon it solely by reason of its having been so negligently maintained. From a judgment awarding respondent damages for his injuries suffered when he fell upon the protruding band, the owners of the theater appeal. They demand a reversal on the grounds of (1) insufficient evidence of negligence, (2) insufficient proof of proximate cause, (3) error in striking the affirmative defense of contributory negligence on the part of Mr. and Mrs. Mattox.

Evidence op Negligence—Sufficient

While it is true that there is no direct evidence that the third seat on the 18th row from the rear was in a dangerous and defective condition on July 12, 1950, the circumstances are so pregnant with proof of negligence as to render inescapable the ultimate fact that on that day it was in such a defective condition as to be perilous to a 4-year-old child sitting on the chair behind it. . It is a reasonable inference that the condition of the protruding band on July 19 was exactly its condition on July 12. The seats were stationary; they had not been removed and returned in the interim; every chair had the same band connecting it with its neighbor and many had suffered the same impairment. Appellants denied Mr. Mattox permission to photograph the metal band as he found it July 19 and thereafter repaired it. The gash on respondent’s nose, was, according to the attending physician, cut “about one inch and a quarter long and the edges were rather wéll cut, rather sharp . . . was caused by something rather sharp.” The wound had a clean cut edge without evidences of bruising and contusions which are present when a cut results from a blunt surface such as the rounded top of the back of the seat in front of Howard.

The nature of the cut and the photographic exhibits and drawings of the theater seats are compelling proofs that the protruding metal band was the only object accessible to the child that could have caused the wound described by the physician. It cannot therefore be said that there was no substantial evidence from which the jury could infer that appellants had negligently maintained a constant peril for the patrons of their theater and especially so for those of very tender ages. •

But appellants. contend that even though the sharp metal *778 band so protruded on July 12, 1950, as to constitute a peril for patrons, there is no showing that they had either actual or constructive knowledge thereof for such a period of time as would have afforded them opportunity to remove the danger. However, the presumption of constructive notice to theater owners does not arise from a lapse of time only. Evidence that they have not taken reasonable precautions for the safety of all invitees; that they did not exercise diligence in seeking to know the conditions of every part of their premises and of every object in their theater with which a patron might reasonably be expected to come in contact, and the probability that invitees will not discover invisible or concealed though dangerous hazards in the dim light or darkness of an auditorium—these are all factors, the presence of any of which will indicate negligence on the part of a theater’s management. (Travis v. Metropolitan Theatres Corp., 91 Cal.App.2d 664, 667 [205 P.2d 475].) Whether the dangerous condition has existed long enough to have been discovered by a reasonably prudent man is for the trial court to determine. (Ibid.) The time limitations must be determined from the circumstances of each accident, and whether the sum total of the factors that should alert the proprietor of a theater to a realization of their presence and of their potential harm is likewise for the trier of fact.

That the evidence submitted on the trial of this action is sufficient to justify a finding that appellants so negligently maintained their theater as to constitute it a hazard to its patrons cannot be denied. Many seats throughout the auditorium were found by Mr. Mattox on July 19 to be pushed forward and out of line as was that in front of Howard on July 12. The same condition was found by Mr. Rock as reported in his testimony, although he had never brought the matter to the attention of the manager. On the night of the accident the auditorium was dimly lighted when respondent and his parents arrived. No usher was there to conduct them to a location that was secure from harm and away from protruding sharp-edged metal bands but they had to grope their way to seats without the aid of a flashlight. The seats were antiquated: appellants’ building was the only theater in California using the type of seat they had.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P.2d 664, 111 Cal. App. 2d 774, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattox-v-isley-calctapp-1952.