Pries v. Atlanta Enterprises Inc.

17 S.E.2d 902, 66 Ga. App. 464, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1941
Docket28999.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 902 (Pries v. Atlanta Enterprises Inc.) 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
Pries v. Atlanta Enterprises Inc., 17 S.E.2d 902, 66 Ga. App. 464, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 532 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

Under the law and the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and the court properly granted a nonsuit.

DECIDED DECEMBER 5, 1941. REHEARING DENIED DECEMBER 17, 1941.
I. Pries brought suit against Atlanta Enterprises Inc. to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while in the Fox Theatre, which is operated by the defendant corporation. It was alleged that the plaintiff, at about 9:30 in the morning and before the theatre was opened to the public, went to see his son, who was employed by the defendant to operate the motion-picture projection machine; that the plaintiff, who was an infirm man sixty-five years of age and with impaired vision necessitating the wearing of glasses, both of which facts were known to the defendant, after obtaining permission from a Mr. Evans, an employee of the defendant in charge of the theatre at that time of the day, climbed some steps at the rear of the darkened theatre "until he came to the door which he thought led to the projection booth;" that upon opening this door the plaintiff fell approximately eight feet to some generators; that there was no light on the outside or the inside of the generator room; that the door to the generator room was not locked; that the maintenance of the generator room in the conditions set out above constituted a pitfall or mantrap, and that the existence of this pitfall or mantrap on the premises was known to the defendant. The petition alleged various injuries resulting from his fall from which he "suffered and continues to suffer great pain," most of which injuries were to his hands and fingers; that the plaintiff has been unable to work for *Page 465 more than seven months; that the plaintiff has lost $2000 from his inability to work; that the plaintiff is due the sum of $9000 for bodily pain and suffering and mental pain and anguish. The petition alleged that all the items of damage are the direct result of the defendant's negligence in inviting the plaintiff on the premises without exercising reasonable care to save him from injury; in allowing and inviting the plaintiff to ascend the steps when the defendant knew or should have known that the door to the generator room was open and unlocked; in not maintaining adequate lighting along the hallway so that the plaintiff could see his way; in not maintaining a light in the generator room so that the plaintiff could see his danger; in not keeping the door to the generator room locked; in not maintaining steps or a guard rail at the entrance of the generator room so that the plaintiff could have avoided the injury. The defendant denied all the material allegations of the petition.

It appeared from the evidence introduced by the plaintiff that he was engaged in the trade of a furrier. "As to what happened that morning . . my son invited me to go up to see him on October 20, 1938 [the day of the accident]. I went over there. When I walked into the Fox Theatre I met a fellow by the name of Mr. Evans. . . I says, `Mr. Evans, is my son upstairs?' He says, `Yes.' I says, `Can I go up to see him?' He says, `Yes.' I know Mr. Evans for thirty-eight years. I walked up four flights of stairs. When I got up close to the place where my son works I went and I saw a door right in front of my eyes. I pushed the door and I put my foot out and I went down about ten or twelve feet, right there on top of an electric generator. . . The theatre was not very much lit up that morning. It was kind of dark. . . After I saw Mr. Evans I had to climb about eighty-three steps before I came to that door. I had glasses on that morning. I have worn glasses about fifteen years. . . I don't know whether Mr. Evans knew that my eyesight was impaired or not; I couldn't tell you. When I came to this door that I opened there was no light in front of it. The light was bad. I could see about twelve or fifteen feet away from the door. There was no warning signal on the door. There was no sign on the door. As to whether the door was locked or unlocked . . it was open; if there was a sign `dangerous' or the door locked I never would have opened it. *Page 466 When I opened the door there was no light burning inside of the door. It was pitch dark. There was no platform in there. There was no railing. The minute I pushed the door open I put my foot out and I went down." The plaintiff testified as to the extent of his injuries, the expenses of medical treatment and his average earnings during the season. On cross-examination he testified: "I had worked for these people, the Fox Theatre Company. I do alterations for their wives. I do work for them. I was perfectly familiar with the premises. It was dark when I went in that first door; not very much light. It was not dark all of the time that I was in the theatre. It was light enough to see my footsteps. There was no change in the light from the time I went in there until I fell and hurt myself. It was dark when I went in there; not very much light. It continued to be like that until I fell. . . I was going up to the top of the building to the projecting room. I had been there before. I was there twice in eight years. I had been there before and I knew where it was, all right. I came in the theatre and I walked on the level of the floor to where you get to the main steps that lead to the balcony. It was dark when I made that movement from the door to the bottom of the steps. I could see all right. I could see where I was going. I did not fall down on the first floor. . . When I walked up to the fourth floor I walked over to the door. As to what door it was . . to the door I think which is the right door; the one that — the door that brings me to my son's booth. I went up there for the purpose of getting a note signed that I had due in the bank that day. That note was a loan from the bank to me personally. . . My son was an indorser on that note. That was my business in the theatre. . . I walked over to this door and turned the knob and opened the door. It was dark in there. As to whether I could see it was dark . . it was dark; yes, sir. . . As to why I went in the door when it was dark and I could not see where I was going . . well, I thought this the door what bring me to my son's projecting room. There was nothing the matter with my eyesight at that time. As to whether there is nothing the matter with it now . . well, my eyes isn't as good as they was at that time. I could see all right when I went in there. . . I had no other business in that theatre except to get that note signed. The door was shut. I had to open it to go in there." *Page 467

A physician testified as to the plaintiff's injuries. Mr. A. C. Evans, employed by the defendant as superintendent of cleaners and who was in charge of the theatre from 6 a. m. until noon, testified as follows: "I recall Mr. Pries coming to the theatre that morning. He came in from the Peachtree entrance. I was sitting right by the entrance when he came in. He spoke to me. He asked me had Jake come. Jake was his son, one of the operators. I told him yes, Jake had just come and had gone upstairs a few minutes before. . . As to what he [the plaintiff] said to me about his going up the steps . . I don't remember his asking me anything. I knew Mr. Pries very well; known him for twenty years. I knew that his son worked there. I had seen Mr. Pries around the theatre a great many times. If I hadn't known him I would not have let him in; but, knowing him as well as I did, I didn't say anything. . . I looked after every one that came in and went out, and all at the same time had my eyes on the cleaners to see that they did the work properly. I was to keep out people who had no business on the premises and let in people that I thought had business on the premises. I wear glasses.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 902, 66 Ga. App. 464, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pries-v-atlanta-enterprises-inc-gactapp-1941.