Maybee v. Missouri Orpheum Corporation

181 S.W.2d 771, 238 Mo. App. 537, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 228
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 771 (Maybee v. Missouri Orpheum Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maybee v. Missouri Orpheum Corporation, 181 S.W.2d 771, 238 Mo. App. 537, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 228 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*540 CAVE', J.

This is an action for the recovery of damages for personal injuries suffered by respondent, a patron of defendant’s theater, by reason of her being thrown to the floor when her foot was caught under a raised or eupped-up carpet edge as she attempted to leave her seat in the theater. Trial to a jury, verdict and judgment for $4500. Defendant appeals.

But two assignments of error are made: (a) The court erred in refusing to sustain appellant’s.demurrer at the close of all the evidence because “plaintiff failed to introduce any evidence showing that appellant had either actual or constructive knowledge of the presence of the loose or cupped-up condition of the carpet prior to plaintiff’s fall, so that the appellant could have had an opportunity by the exercise of ordinary care to have remedied the alleged defect or warned the plaintiff of the same-,” (Italics ours); (b) error in giving plaintiff’s Instruction A.

The petition alleged different grounds of negligence but the only one involved on this appeal is the failure of the defendant to warn of a danger of which it knew or, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have known. In ruling the question of whether the demurrer should have been sustained, we must consider all the evidence in the most favorable light to plaintiff, and give her the benefit of all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.

The record discloses that on October 12, 1940, defendant operated a picture theater in Kansas City and on that evening the plaintiff was a patron of said theater. She and her husband purchased tickets and went to the balcony. When they reached the balcony they entered an aisle which was about four feet in width and was carpeted and runs from the south to the north. The picture screen is on the west end of the theater so that patrons sitting in their seats faced the west. From the aisle that runs south to north there are other aisles that lead to the east and upward. The aisles that lead to the east and up are carpeted and are a series of steps with seats to the right and *541 left of each step upward, except at the point where a patron leaves the main aisle. At that point there are four steps .up before the patron reaches the first row of seats.

¥e are here concerned with aisle No. 2, counting from the south wall of the theater. When plaintiff and her husband reached the main aisle in the balcony they were met by one of defendant’s ushers, Floyd Mock, who was equipped with a flashlight and, according to the testimony of defendant’s assistant manager, it was his duty to conduct patrons to their seats and, among other things, “to be on the lookout for any defects there might be . . . and to warn . . . if he happens to see a defect.” Mock, while taking plaintiff and her husband to aisle No. 2, preceded them by three or four steps and walked up the steps of aisle No. 2 in advance of them, stopped in front of the first row of seats on the north side of that aisle and directed his flashlight on the floor of the entrance to the aisle. Plaintiff’s husband testified that the usher had reached a point in the aisle opposite the first row of seats and was standing facing north with his flashlight directed “right on the entrance of the row,” when plaintiff and her husband started up the steps. That when she got within “about a step and a half of him” he stepped up and back and raised the flashlight some “ so it would be flashed over her as we entered the row, and shone his light in the center of that first row. ’ ’ Concerning the same matter the plaintiff testified that as she walked up the steps to where Mock was standing he stepped up to another step and “raised the light indicating the seats he wanted us to take. ’ ’ She and her husband seated themselves in about the fourth and fifth seats from the south end of the first row. There were no other patrons in that row of seats.

In front of them was an iron railing to prevent anyone from falling from that position into the main aisle some three or four feet below. From photographs it appears that patrons entering as plaintiff did would leave the main aisle and walk up three steps to the east then turn facing north and take one step up into the aisle or passageway between the first row of seats and the iron railing. The carpet covering the steps upward laps or extends over into the passageway in front of the seats some eight to ten inches, the balance of the passageway is not carpeted. The carpet was about one-half inch thick. About ten minutes after plaintiff and her husband were seated, they decided to move and plaintiff walked along the passageway between the seats and the railing and facing south. She testified that, as she undertook to step, into the aisle running east and west, “. . . just as I got there ready to step out into the aisle my foot caught on this rug and I immediately fell right down. ’ ’ In further explanation of the cause of her fall she said, “my foot just went under something and it caught and caused me to fall, that’s all. . . . My foot caught under the rug on the floor. . . . Q. Could you feel your foot go under something? A. Yes. Q. Could you give us any idea how far under *542 the rug it went? • A. Well, just over the toe of my.shoe, you know, oh, an inch or two I would say. . . . Q. At the time you fell you did not know what caused you to fall ? A. Oh, sure, I. knew my foot caught on something on the floor. Q. Did you arrive at that by the process of sensation? A. I could feel it. . . . A. Could you tell what your foot was under? A. It was under the rug that was on the floor. Of course I couldn’t see it.” She was preceding her husband. He testified that “she just plunged head first, you might say, out into the aisle.”

She was assisted to a restroom where help was called and it was discovered she had lost something from her purse and her husband and Mock returned to the scene of the accident to search for the article. .Mock directed his flashlight on the floor and steps. The husband testified that at that time he. observed that the carpet was cupped-up about two and one-half to three inches high and of about the same width. That this cupped-up place was at the north edge of the carpet which overlapped into the passageway along which plaintiff was walking at the time her foot caught and caused her to fall. Mock denied there was any such cupped up place. He did admit that he conducted' the plaintiff and her husband to their seats and that he used his flashlight in directing them into the aisle leading to their seats and that a person could see the condition of the floor and carpet better when using a flashlight than without one and that when he used his flashlight he “could see around the very edges” of the carpet. He also testified that he had conducted other patrons to seats immediately adjacent to aisle No. 2, and in doing so had to pass up and down the steps where plaintiff fell; that he had conducted such patrons there just prior to the time plaintiff and her husband arrived and also after they had been seated and before they left their seats and plaintiff fell.

The carpet was new and had been laid spme two or three months prior to the accident. There was no direct evidence as to how long this cupped-up condition had existed. The carpet layer testified that the carpet where plaintiff fell was nailed down with about fourteen sixteen-ounce tacks which were from five-eighths to seven-sixteenths of an inch long, and that they would not come loose.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 771, 238 Mo. App. 537, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maybee-v-missouri-orpheum-corporation-moctapp-1944.