Regent Realty Co. v. Ford

146 A. 457, 157 Md. 514, 1929 Md. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1929
Docket[No. 18, April Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 146 A. 457 (Regent Realty Co. v. Ford) 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
Regent Realty Co. v. Ford, 146 A. 457, 157 Md. 514, 1929 Md. LEXIS 122 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. Charles A. Eord, plaintiff and appellee, was injured on the night of October 5th, 1926, while bowling at the bowling alleys of the defendant. He sued'the defendant and recovered a verdict on which judgment was entered. This appeal is from that judgment.

*515 The plaintiff offered testimony tending to prove that plaintiff, on the night of the accident, with other members of a boAvling eiub to which he belonged, played in a bowling tournament at the alleys of the defendant from about 8:30 until 10:30, and after that six members of the club remained and played several match games; that during the tournament the alleys mostly used were Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 5. For the match games Nos. 4 and 5 were selected by the bowlers. During these match games, prior to the accident to plaintiff, one of the men fell twice and two others once each on No. 4 alley. One of them, Edward R. Bowers, testified: “With reference to the approach of that alley, I noticed when I started to deliver the ball, it was like a damp sticky floor about our feet, they would not slide or glide * * * and I went headlong * * *. My falling head-on was like some one grabbing me by the ankle and holding me; would not let you slide forward.” The witness did not continue to play on that alley; he went to No. 5. In reply to the question whether he said anything to the other players about it, witness said: “I just made the remark that the floor was sticky, and I refused to bowl on it, and I waited for No. 5 alley to finish bowling.” Asked whether plaintiff was there when witness made this remark he replied: “I could not say — sure, he was there, but I was not talking directly to Mr. Ford.”

Witness saw the man in charge sprinkle out of a can that looked like a talcum can powder of some kind on the floor of No. 4 about two feet back of the foul line. Another, the brother of the plaintiff, said the floor was sticky; he attempted to slide and could not do it; he did not see any one sprinkle powder; did not say anything to any one about the alley being sticky.

Edward II. Walker, Jr., was the witness who said he fell twice. He said he bowled on alley No. 4 in the match games; the runway was rather sticky, or there was something there, you could not slide; he fell on that alJey twice before plaintiff fell; does not know what caused him to fall; as he ran to throw the ball, instead of sliding he stopped very abruptly, and he went down on the floor. Couldn’t say what caused *516 him to stop abruptly — “it seems like it was sticky, and seemed like you would slide and something had hold of your feet and would not let you go”; that when h© got up he examined the runway and there seemed to be several dark spots around on the floor about the size of a water glass top; did not examine the spots, but they seemed to be a sort of cakey substance; that he did not tell any one about these spots or call the manager’s attention to them; that the boys were talking about falling, and witness saw the manager come over and sprinkle talcum or white powder of some kind on the runway.

Of all the people who were there this witness was the only one who saw the alleged spots on the floor. He did not speak of them to any one, and apparently attached no importance to them, as he continued to use the alley without seeking to have the spots removed.

Gilbert Kraft, testifying as plaintiff’s witness, said: “I rolled two games on Ho. 4 alley, and when I was in the seventh box of the third game the alley seemed to get sticky. The alley did not seem to get sticky until that time; it seemed pretty good up until that time. It was in the third game that this accident happened.”

It appears from the testimony that it was a damp misty night and that plaintiff and others who fell (with the possible exception of one who was not asked) had rubber heels on their shoes.

Plaintiff testified that he had been bowling ten or twelve years before the accident; he had not bowled on Ho. 4 that evening until that particular box during which the accident occurred; it happened in throwing the second ball; that when he rolled the first ball he did not slide as well as usual; that in rolling the second ball he noticed his foot seemed to hit something or stop short, as if he ran into something sticky; could not say what caused the sticking; it stuck as if there was something there that grabbed hold of the sole of the shoe; did not notice anything unusual, only the floor did not seem to be as slippery as usual; that he did not see any one fall on that alley prior to the accident.

*517 klaurice Berger was offered as an expert by the plaintiff. He testified that the proper treatment of the approach to alleys is to scrub it and dry it off every morning; that after this is done nothing else is required before starting the games in the morning, afternoon, or evening, unless a damp spot is found, which is removed by steel wool; that a rainy or misty day causes dampness aud stickiness so that the bowlers cannot slide, and if they try to slide it will throw them. This stickiness or dirt from shoes is removed by steel wool; that talcum powder is also used to make the approach slippery; that on a damp or misty night, to prevent stickiness from dampness, the steel wool should be used continually, that is, you would have to practically keep a boy up there for that purpose. In further explanation the witness said: “In other words, there are eight alleys, more or less, and you are bowling on one of the alleys and it sticks; you tell the manager to get the spot clean, and the manager tells the boy to go there and clean it, and they wait until it is clean, and when he gets through with that alley, perhaps there is a. call for another alley.”

On cross-examination this witness was asked: “Q. It is a fact that the rubber heel of a man’s shoe clamped down tight on an alley is pretty much the same as putting the breaks on an automobile? A. It is, on a damp night, with black rubber heels. Q. And it will stop you if you put your heel down when you slide, or will slow you up ? A. Your own heel won’t stop you, but the marks from another heel will throw you. In other words, you can slide with your heel, but if anybody comes up behind you and you leave a mark, they will fall on that mark, but it won’t throw you — if the approach is clean. In other words, it makes a sticky spot for the next bowler. * * "x' You may not be able to slide as fast if your heel is wet like you will when it is dry. Using shoes that have gotten dampness through rain makes the alley stick. Your shoes stick if you are trying to bowl on it with damp soles. Q. If a bowler finds that the alley is sticky, he notifies the manager to clean it, is that right, or some one in charge to clean it ? A. Some do and some don’t * * *. Some *518 bowlers don’t care if it is a sticky mark over the left side, they will just switch over on the clean side, and then the next one comes up and he wants to bowl on that side and he will call your attention to. it. Q. And when he calls your attention to it, he waits until you clean it off before using it ? A. Sometimes they will find a place where they can slide, and sometimes they wait and you go to it as soon as you can.

Raymond L.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 457, 157 Md. 514, 1929 Md. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regent-realty-co-v-ford-md-1929.