New Theatre Co. v. Hartlove

90 A. 990, 123 Md. 78, 1914 Md. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 90 A. 990 (New Theatre Co. v. Hartlove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Theatre Co. v. Hartlove, 90 A. 990, 123 Md. 78, 1914 Md. LEXIS 106 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant on this record conducts-'a theatre on Lexington street, in Baltimore 'City, and the appellee was injured therein on the 29fch of November, 1912, while she was a patron of the theatre, by falling from the main floor into the musicians’ pit which was at the time unguarded.

’ The declaration alleged that the appellant did not use due care towards the plaintiff, and by the wrongful act, neglect, and the failure of the defendant in not properly guarding the musicians’ pit inside the theatre, the plaintiff, although flsing due care and caiition, was injured by falling into said pit.

The narr. alleged an act of primary negligence on the part of the defendant, and negatived contributory negligence on the plaintiff’s part.

The proprietor of a theatre or other place of public amusement, to which the public is invited and admission charged, is under an obligation to use ordinary care and dilligence to put and keep the place in a reasonably safe condition for persons attending in pursuance of such invitation. He is not an insurer of the safety of persons attending, but he is bound to use ordinary care for their safety and protection, and if an injury results from a breach of this duty he is liable. There is no dissent to this proposition in any of the cases. The law applicable to this class of cases was carefully considered in Agricultural and Mechanical Association v. Gray, 118 Md. 600, in which Judge Stockbridge said, adopting the principle announced in Schofield v. Wood, 170 Mass. 415: “A person erecting and maintaining a place of public exhibition must use reasonable care in the construction, maintenance *83 and management of it, having regard to the character of exhibitions given therein and the customary conduct^of spectators who witness them, and he cannot escape liability if be is negligent in the manner in which the guard rail in front of the gallery was constructed and maintained, and if a spectator who is injured by the. falling of a guard rail during an exhibition was in the exercise of due care, on the ground that other persons may have contributed to the injury.”

In a large number of cases the terms employed to designate the duty of the owner are “due care,” “ordinary care,” or “reasonable care.” Thus this Court said in Albert v. Ryan, 66 Md. 337, “he who solicits and invites the public to his resorts, must have them in a reasonably safe condition, and not in a condition to risk the lives and limbs of his visitors.” See also 29 Cyc. 453; Swords v. Edgar, 59 N. Y. 28; Thornton v. Agricultural Society, 97 Me. 108; Phillips v. Wisconsin State Agricultural Society, 60 Wis. 401; Kann v. Meyer, 88 Md. 551; Texas State Fair v. Brittain, 118 Fed. 713; Marti v. Texas State Fair Association, 69 S. W. 432; Currier v. Boston Music Hall Association, 135 Mass. 414; Brown v. Southern Kennebec Agricultural Society, 47 Me. 275; 74 Am. Dec. 484; Dunn v. Brown Co. Agl. Soc., 1 L. R. A. 754; Williams v. Mineral Park Association, 128 Iowa., 32. “Yet in each one of the cases where the measure of care or dirty is defined by tbe use of the adjectives “due, ordinary, or reasonable,” the application has been the same as in the cases of Fox v. Buffalo Park, 21 N. Y. App. Div. 321, and Schofield v. Wood, supra.”

The plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove the following facts: That on the afternoon of Yovember 29th, 1912, she went to the defendant’s theatre where vaudeville and moving picture shows are given; that she was accompanied by ber sister, Miss Mamie Griffin, and Mrs. Benjamin R. Johnson; that after purchasing tickets of admission at the box office they were admitted to the front row of seats in the theatre, and that an usher in attendance showed them to their seats. The plaintiff had visited the theatre before. The *84 orchestra or musicians’ pit, into which the plaintiff fell, is lower than the main floor of the theatre leading down to it— one witness said it was “about a foot lotyer, probably more or less,” and another,' who said he had measured it, testified that “it is just 3% inches from the floor to the bottom of the pit.” The distance between the front seats, and the pit is 25% inches when the seats are up, and 15% inches when the seats are down. On her prior visits to the theatre the plaintiff saw that the pit was g’uarded by a rope which ran around it, but on the occasion in question this guard rope had been removed, as testified to by the manager of the theatre “for the purpose of one act going through the audience,” but the plaintiff was not aware that the guard had been removed. The plaintiff testified that “she did not know the rail had been removed at the0 time of the accident.” She further stated that she was not warned about the danger of the pit by anything in the theatre that afternoon. At the time of the accident she was trying to reach a seat in the front row next to the orchestra. “It is very narrow and there is not room enough for people to sit with their feet comfortably outside of anybody walking along there.” When she fell she was right at the end of the aisle and about turned around on the front row to take the seat that was vacant. This seat that she was attempting to taire was the third from the aisle. This aisle was the right-hand aisle going toward the stage, and the seat was to the right of this aisle. “As I was stepping towards that seat, I went down in the orchestra pit; I attempted to catch hold of the rope, knowing positively that it had been there,” she had been to the theatre many times and had seen the- rope. “At the time of the accident there was a moving-picture on, and it was extremely dark, and coming- from the light, you know, made it seem that much darker. I suppose that the musicians had their lights lit.; but I had to get. down to the pit to see that. The other part of the theatre was totally dark * *■ *. The theatre was crowded and many were standing.” When she fell she went “head first and fell on my feet, and that is when I sprained, my ankle. She was *85 helped out hy her two companions and Mr. E'itchen.” “He caught me up bodily under the arms because I could not move. They then led me over into the box, and I stayed in the box.” Her ankle wms hurting badly at the time, but she did not examine it until she got home and look off her shoe, when her foot began to swell and .she sent for her doctor, Albert Chambers. M. I). “T was off my feet for eight weeks and 1 cannot get along very well with it now, so I don’t know how long I will he laid up.” The sprain was very painful, “I never suffered so much pain.” Her ankle still pained her. She said that she fell when in the act of turning from the aisle to the seat; that- she fell before she realized where she was; that she was not able to see very much.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A. 990, 123 Md. 78, 1914 Md. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-theatre-co-v-hartlove-md-1914.