Normand v. Thomas Theatre Corp.

84 N.W.2d 451, 349 Mich. 50, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 325
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1957
DocketDocket 4, Calendar 47,086
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 84 N.W.2d 451 (Normand v. Thomas Theatre Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Normand v. Thomas Theatre Corp., 84 N.W.2d 451, 349 Mich. 50, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 325 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Black, J.

The defendant’s theater in Calumet opens from the street directly into the “theater lobby.” The lobby is a little over 32 feet in length and parallels the street. As the patron enters he finds the ticket office to his left, at end of the lobby, and the rest-room entryways to his right, at the other end. The theater proper is straight ahead.

About 5:50 in the afternoon of February 24, 1955, plaintiff and the presently-identified members of her family left nearby Lake Linden for Calumet, intend *52 ing to see the movie show scheduled that evening— starting at 6:30 — by defendant. The party consisted of plaintiff, her husband, plaintiff’s mother and stepfather, and plaintiff’s daughter. They arrived at the theater shortly after 6 o’clock and, noting that the theater lights had not yet been turned on, waited in their parked automobile until the theater manager and the ticket clerk arrived. As soon as the latter arrived and turned on the theater lights, plaintiff’s party left the parked car and entered the lobby. The stepfather (aged 67), described in the record, as having “high blood pressure and heart trouble and he is awfully excitable and nervous,” needed personal relief. Upon entry the old gentleman inquired of plaintiff for guidance to the men’s room and, being shown the doorway to the right with designation “gentlemen” above the casing, proceeded to enter it.

We turn now to construction details of the doorway and entry. As one faces the .door, it is hinged at the left and opens inward to the left. The opening are is limited to 90 degrees. Just inside the doorway and at level with the lobby floor is a platform measuring 4 feet' and 2 inches (this measurement is straight in from the doorway) by 5 feet (measured parallel to the closed door). A stairway descends straight ahead, from the doorway and platform. It leads to the basement of the building where the rest facilities are located. The stairway consists of 10-inch- steps with 7-inch risers, and it extends far enough to complete k vertical descent of 8 feet (from platform level to basement level). The stairway and platform are supported at the right by a partition leading from the right side of the door casing and at right angles thereto. This partition extends to and beyond the' end of the stairs. A hand rail extends along the partition, from top to bottom of the stairway. Just inside the mentioned doorway and at proper height, an electric switch — set in the par *53 tition wall — provides means of lighting the stairway and platform. Snch lighting equipment was in proper working order hut had not yet been turned on when the stepfather sought to use the mentioned facilities.

The stepfather, having stepped inside to the platform and finding it completely dark inside the doorway, called to plaintiff for aid in finding the light switch. Her husband at the time was at the other end of the lobby, waiting at the ticket office for the latter to open. Plaintiff stepped through the doorway and attempted to find the switch by feeling along the partition wall. At that time her stepfather had. his back to the partition wall near the doorway, and it is apparent that he was thus unwittingly concealing from plaintiff the switch she was looking for. Plaintiff took 2 steps forward, feeling meanwhile for the switch, and thereupon stepped over the first step' of the stairway. She fell to the basement and received personal injuries for which this action was brought against defendant.

Suit having been instituted in the Houghton circuit, the case was tried to court and jury, Honorable Leo J. Brennan, circuit judge presiding, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $10,000. Defendant reviews and insists that its mol tion for directed verdict, counting on contributory negligence, and its reserved motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict, * should have been granted. It contends further that the verdict was excessive in amount.

. Defendant’s negligence was conceded at close of proofs. The concession is shown this way in the separately-certified transcript:

*54 “The Court: Let the record show at this time at the close of the arguments and before the court instructs the jury, that counsel for the defendant has admitted negligence on the part of the defendant because of its failure to have a light on in the room leading to the men’s toilet when the front door of the theater was unlocked and when patrons were on the premises. Is that a correct statement of the situation?
“Mr. Donnelly (defendant’s counsel): Yes, your Honor.
“The Court: Mr. Messner, you understand that?
“Mr. Messner (plaintiff’s counsel): That is my understanding, yes.”
First: Was plaintiff guilty of contributory negli-gencef

In 1896, following then recent lead of the supreme court, the court of appeals of the 8th circuit prepared a helpful brief addressed to this question. * The occasion was a suit for negligence, brought by a Northern Pacific railroad passenger. At near midnight — it was Near Year’s eve — the plaintiff went forward from the rearmost pullman (where plaintiff and wife were berthed) to seek out the conductor for information regarding a proposed stop-over. The passageway of each pullman — at each end — consisted of right angle reverse turns leading to enclosed vestibules. At the time in question, an outer door “opening upon the steps” of one of the vestibules had been left open. This vestibule was unlighted at the time, although dimmed lamps within each car shed some but not much light therein. The plaintiff, having gone forward and having completed his business with the conductor, returned to the vestibule just described and, mistaking the vestibule platform for the passageway turning left and then right in the car to be entered, turned left in the vestibule and *55 fell from the rapidly moving train. The train was proceeding on a trestle over Lake Pend d’ Oreille in an uninhabited region of northern Idaho, and plaintiff: was precipitated into the icy waters below as the train proceeded westward toward the coast. (Yes, he did survive.)

Was he guilty of contributory negligence? The court answered in the negative with this preface, the conception of which took place in Michigan (p 739, 740 of report):

“In Jones v. East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia B. Co., 128 US 443, 445, 446 (9 S Ct 118, 32 L ed 478), the lower court instructed the jury to render a verdict for the defendant upon the ground that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence, but the supreme court reversed the judgment, saying:
“ ‘But we think these questions [of negligence] are for the jury to determine. We see no reason, so long as the jury system is the law of the land, and the jury is made the tribunal to decide disputed questions of fact, why it should not decide such questions as these as well as others.’

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.W.2d 451, 349 Mich. 50, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/normand-v-thomas-theatre-corp-mich-1957.