Moone v. Smith

65 S.E. 712, 6 Ga. App. 649, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 415
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 5, 1909
Docket1731
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 65 S.E. 712 (Moone v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moone v. Smith, 65 S.E. 712, 6 Ga. App. 649, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 415 (Ga. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

Moone sued Smith and Morrow for damages on account of personal injuries. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the petition and dismissed it, and this is the error assigned. The petition in substance sets forth the following facts: The defendants were partners and joint owners in the business of running a pool and billiard room, and sold therein cigars, tobacco, and “soft drinks.” Their place of business is a public place and resort for recreation and amusement, and they solicit and invite the patronage of the public. The plaintiff went into this place for the purpose of amusement, and, while engaged in playing a game of pool, and conducting himself in a proper and orderly manner, a quarrel arose in the room between four or five men who were intoxicated. The quarrel among these men began in the rear of the room, some distance from where he was playing. They became disorderly and began cursing. Four of them, who were drunk, threatened to do violence to the person of one who was not drunk, and‘forced this one to retreat from one part of the room to another. This disorderly conduct continued for some ten or fifteen minutes, during which time there was a continuous brawl between the [650]*650parties, and a consequent noise -and disturbance was noticeable in all parts of the room. One of the defendants was present in the room during the entire continuance of this disorderly conduct- and witnessed it, and the emplojmes of the place, who were waiting on customers in various parts of the room, were also witnesses of the disorder. Notwithstanding a breach of the peace was imminent and actually committed, neither the proprietors nor any of their agents made any effort to quell the disorder by personal interference or by calling on the police. While this disorderly conduct was in progress, plaintiff being in no way involved in it, continuing his game, relying upon the protection due him and the other peaceable and orderly customers from the proprietors, the difficulty reached its climax and the fighters suddenly precipitated themselves to the place where the plaintiff was standing, ran against him with such suddenness and violence that he was unable either to withdraw or to defend himself, and in the mfilée one of the drunken men engaged in the fight struck him a terrible blow in the eye, putting the eye entirely out and involving his other eye, threatening complete blindness. He charges that the proprietors and their agents had ample notice and opportunity to interfere and prevent the continuance and culmination of the brawl and fight, but wholly neglected and failed to do so and to perform their duty for the protection of the plaintiff and other peaceable and orderly customers.

The essential foundation for all actionable negligence is the existence of a duty which the defendants owed to the plaintiff in connection with the particular subject-matter, and the breach of that duty by the defendants. The duty is defined by the law; the breach of that duty is determined by the particular facts. Where the duty and the breach concur, a legal injury arises, and, if damage results, an action will lie. Of course, where the allegations of the petition, when most favorably considered for the plaintiff, show neither duty nor breach, or duty without breach, or show that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by his own negligence, or that he could by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence, the trial court, on demurrer, should put an end to the case. Upon a critical examination of the allegations of the petition, our conviction is that they suffice to show that the defendants owed a duty to the plaintiff while he [651]*651was in their place of business. This duty was to use ordinary care and diligence to protect the plaintiff, while he was in the defendants’ place of business lawfully engaged, from injury, — injury either from the unsafe condition of the premises themselves, from their own conduct, or from that of their employees, or injury from any vicious or improper persons who were in the room either as customers or otherwise. The defendants had invited the plaintiff into their place of business, for his amusement and their benefit. The plaintiff had accepted the invitation of the defendants, and confided in their implied promise that he would be protected while in this place of amusement controlled by them, in so far as they could protect him by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence. When a man keeps a place of amusement and invites the public to come therein for the purposes of his business, he must be taken to promise protection against such injuries or risks as the character of the business he is conducting would naturally suggest to him might be expected where due care is not taken to guard against their occurrence, and to insure to the person entering a safe egress. We think the case even stronger than that of one who invites a person to come on his premises to transact business with him, and who, while on such premises, is bitten by a vicious animal of the owner of the premises, or is injured by some unsafe condition of the premises themselves, or by the negligent conduct in some way of the owner of the premises or his servants. Here the plaintiff is invited into a saloon by the defendants. He is tempted to enter by the allurements of pleasure held out to him by the defendants. He enters, not only for the purpose of his own amusement, but to contribute to. the,-profits of the defendants-and to the success of their, business. Surely he has a right to assume that the place is reasonably safe and that the proprietors will exercise reasonable care and diligence to protect him while he is peaceably and lawfully engaged therein. The same principle applies as in the case of carriers and passengers, the rule of diligence only differing. In the latter ease the rule of diligence is greater, being that of extraordinary care to protect, the passengers not only from the insults and injuries of the employees of the company, but also from the insults and injuries, of fellow passengers. Hillman v. Georgia R. Co., 126 Ga. 814 (56 S. E. 68); Richmond & Danville R. Co. v. Jefferson, 89 Ga. 554 (16 S. [652]*652E. 69, 17 L. R. A. 571, 32 Am. St. R. 87); 1 Tbomp. Neg. §996. The case sub judiee, therefore, while it may be novel in the application of the principle, is, both upon the analogies of the law and the dictates of common sense, amply supported by the principle; and we hold that the presence of drunken men actually engaged in a fight on the premises involved a danger to the peaceable and orderly customers of the proprietors, against which it was the duty of the defendants, by the, exercise of ordinary care, to pro(tect the plaintiff. We think that one who maintains places of amusement and recreation for the public is charged by law with the duty of preserving order therein and of protecting those who enter such places upon his invitation and for his benefit. We fully concur in the opinion of the court in the case of Rommel v. Schambacher, 120 Pa. 579 (11 Atl. 779, 6 Am. St. R. 732), that the “proprietor of a saloon or tavern open for entertainment of the public is bound to exercise ordinary care and diligence to see that one who enters is protected, not only from the assaults and violence of those in his employ, but of drunken and vicious men whom he may choose to harbor.” See also Blakeley v. White Star Line, 154 Mich. 635 (118 N. W. 482, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 772, and case note); Higgins v. Franklin Soc., 100 Me. 565 (62 Atl. 708, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1132, and case note).

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E. 712, 6 Ga. App. 649, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moone-v-smith-gactapp-1909.