Park Circuit & Realty Co. v. Ringo's Guardian

242 Ky. 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 2, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 242 Ky. 255 (Park Circuit & Realty Co. v. Ringo's Guardian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park Circuit & Realty Co. v. Ringo's Guardian, 242 Ky. 255 (Ky. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

[257]*257Opinion of the Court by

Judge Richardson —

Reversing.

The Park Circuit & Realty Company, a. corporation, in July, 1927, owned and operated a swimming pool at Fountain Ferry Park, in Jefferson county, Ky. Its pool was 60 feet by 200 feet. Near the east end where the water was shallow a “water wheel” is located, which is used by its patrons for sporting’ in the water. It is located about 8 feet from the wall of the pool. To reach the wheel, a ladder extending from the bottom of the pool to the platform near the top of the wheel is used. On reaching the top, a bather may walk out on the wheel and sit, stand, or occupy it in any position he may choose. The movement of the bather starts the wheel to revolving, and carries or throws the bather as he may desire into the water. The wheel is 6 or 7 feet in diameter, 12 or 14 inches in width, with a platform from 20 to 24 inches in width extending on each side of the wheel. The wheel dips about 10 or 12 inches below the water, and extends about 9 or 10 feet above its surface.

An admission fee is charged and collected from the bathers by the appellant for their use of the pool. The appellees, Durwood W. Ringo, was in July, 1927, fourteen years old, and a frequent patron of the pool. He states that he did not use or enjoy the wheel; his sport was swimming. He had acquired the ability to swim with skill. On or about the 10th day of July, 1927, while engaged in swimming between the wheel and the wall of the pool — a space of about 8 feet — another person walked or stepped on top of the wheel. Ringo claims this person slipped “off the boards of the wheel and fell,” his chip striking Ringo, his teeth cutting and lacerating the scalp an inch or an inch and a half in length, near the top of his head on the right side.. Ringo claims he was thereby dazed but managed to get out, over the edge of the pool.

The question in the case of first importance is the alleged negligence, if any, of the Park Circuit & Realty Company, as the primary and proximate cause of the appellee’s injury. After setting out in his petition a description of the water wheel, its size, construction, and operation, he charges that “the construction and operation of the wheel is dangerous to the life and limbs of the patrons of the defendant and to the. persons using the said device,” and that its use makes the swimming pool unsafe and a dangerous place; that appellant had knowl[258]*258edge or could have had knowledge of this danger, by the exercise of ordinary care; that “a performer on the • wheel slipped, fell sidewise from the said wheel, and struck his (Ringo’s) head with great force and violence”, which, he avers, was a consequence of the negligence of the appellant.

To prevent a recovery the appellant traversed the petition and in the second paragraph of its answer interposed contributory negligence as a defense.

At the conclusion of the appellee’s evidence the appellant requested the court to give to the jury a peremptory instruction to find for it, which was refused. Its right to this instruction necessarily depends upon the evidence in behalf of appellee. A careful consideration and scrutiny of the evidence in his behalf convinces us that a peremptory instruction should have been given. The appellee is the only eye-witness to the transaction occurring at the time he received his injury. His testimony in relation thereto is in substance as follows: After engaging in diving in the deeper water, he came toward the end of the pool in the vicinity of the water wheel, and while swimming between the wheel and the wall of the pool, a young man unknown to him climbed on top of the wheel slipped, fell, and struck him on the head. To be absolutely accurate, we here give certain questions propounded to and answered by appellee, as follows:

“Q. How long has this wheel been in the pool? A. They have had it there ever since I have been going down there.
“Q. Ever since it was built? A. Yes, I had never been around it though, I didn’t like the idea.
“Q. You never rode on that wheel? A. No sir.
“Q. When did you last examine the wheel in this pool? A. I don’t remember that.
“Q. When did you find slime on that wheel? A. The very first time I went over there.
“Q. You don’t know how long that was before this accident? A. No.
“Q. What kind of slime was there on the wheel? A. The same kind of slime that is on anything subjected to water for any length of time.
“Q. What kind of slime? A. It was colorless on top.
‘ ‘ Q. How thick was the slime ? A. I don’t know, I know it was slippery.- . . .
[259]*259“Q. You saw someone fall off? A. I saw somebody was coming between me and tbe wheel.
“Q. You saw them coming down all tbe way you were swimming from tbe top end of tbe pool up to tbe wheel? A. Yes sib
“Q. How carefully did yon observe tbe person who fell from tbe wheel or jumped from tbe wheel on you? A. Tbe only time I bad to see him was when be was coming down on me. ’ ’

Accepting this testimony of appellee, it cannot be said that be was stating any more than merely bis opinion when be stated on bis examination in chief that “tbe boards on tbe wheel were slippery; that there was a kind of green, slimy substance or water growth on tbe wheel” at tbe time the person fell and struck him. His statement that be ‘ ‘ slipped off the boards up there — -fell sidewise off tbe wheel, . . . and struck me on tbe bead,” amounts to no more than bis opinion. For tbe reason bis testimony discloses tbe fact that previous to, and at tbe time of, tbe accident, tbe appellee bad neither time nor opportunity to ascertain and to know whether tbe boards on tbe wheel were “slippery” or covered with “green” or any colored slime. It is equally as true that bis statement that tbe person who fell upon him slipped and by reason thereof fell is not a statement of fact. It should be conceded that tbe opinion of this witness that tbe boards on tbe wheel were at that time covered with algae or slime and that tbe person slipped and fell, does not establish negligence on tbe part of appellant, sufficient to. rest tbe verdict of tbe jury. Tbe sudden falling of tbe person onto tbe appellee may have been caused by something other than the wheel itself or something with which appellant bad no connection. Excepting tbe appellee’s opinion, so far as the evidence shows or tends to show, the person who fell upon him might have done so of bis own volition, in utter disregard of bis safety or as a result of youthful aberration or from tbe use of spiritns frumanti or some other cause which might be conjectured by an active, diligent and fertile imagination. Under the showing made in this case, tbe actual real cause of tbe falling of tbe person from tbe wheel onto appellee is a matter of mere surmise, conjecture or speculation which is insufficient to rest a verdict upon Wileys Adm’r v. C. & C. R. R. Co., 232 Ky. 15, 22 S. W. (2d) 263; Hanor v. West Ken[260]*260tucky Coal Co., 241 Ky. 163, 43 S. W. (2d) 689; Fee’s Adrn’x v. Mahan-Ellison Coal Corp., 241 Ky. 231, 43 S. W. (2d) 681], and the circumstances show that only the person who fell could have actual, direct, positive knowledge of the real cause of his falling from the wheel.

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Bluebook (online)
242 Ky. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-circuit-realty-co-v-ringos-guardian-kyctapp-1932.