Rosensteil v. Lisdas

456 P.2d 61, 253 Or. 625, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 500
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 456 P.2d 61 (Rosensteil v. Lisdas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosensteil v. Lisdas, 456 P.2d 61, 253 Or. 625, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 500 (Or. 1969).

Opinions

O’CONNELL, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff as a result of his efforts to break up an affray which occurred in defendants’ restaurant. The trial court directed a verdict for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.

At about 3:00 a.m. on August 13, 1966 the plaintiff and a companion stopped to eat at defendants’ all-night restaurant in the small town of Cornelius. The defendants’ restaurant was adjacent to a bar which was also operated by defendants. The bar had closed at 2:30. The restaurant was crowded with people some of whom had come from defendants’ bar and other bars in the town.

• Soon after plaintiff entered the restaurant a man came running into the restaurant pursued by two others later identified as David and Jeff Hale. Plaintiff described the scene as follows:

“A. We were sitting there eating ham and eggs and all of a sudden the door burst open and this fellow came in screaming. It wasn’t screaming— it was an actual screech and he was pretty well beat up. His eyes, were closed and this other-, fellow immediately came in the door right after him and he more or less tackled him, and he wrapped [627]*627himself around him and they both fell to the floor, and the fellow that tackled the other fellow put his arms and legs around him and held him, and the other fellow was in there by then and started kicking him in the head.
“I didn’t believe it at first. I sat there watching him kicking him in the head. The whole place was silent except for the thump, thump, thump. The fellow on the floor finally quit screaming. I guess he was knocked out. He lay still and the fellow standing up still kept kicking him. I just couldn’t see it, so I jumped up and grabbed thé fellow from behind that was doing the kicking and held his arms. And a few seconds after that several people, I guess they were customers drug the other fellow off of the floor that was holding the other one, and the fellow I was holding, he started saying, ‘don’t hit me. Don’t hit me. I don’t want to go to jail. Please don’t hit me.’ So, I figured I had already become involved enough so I let him go and in the meantime the other fellow had been ejected out the front door and when I did let him go, he went out what I took to be the back door. * # * * * That fellow was still unconscious and people were milling around and I went over and his hand was stepped on by people milling around. I started to stoop over and help the man and' I was stabbed in the back. * * * I guess they came in the back door, * * ’ * * * it was' the fellow that walked out the back door and the fellow that had been forced out the front. The two that jumped this other fellow. * * * * * [Q]ne grabbed me and started kicking and fighting in desperation more than anything. * * * He had a knife. * * * * * Someone grabbed me around the neck and things really went wild then and we ended up back through the kitchen door and it turned out to be his brother that was — he , was holding me and the other fellow tried to stab me in the stomach and I bent way over and put my arms out and he stabbed me in the left arm. And [628]*628then I went back through the kitchen and towards the counter there and he stabbed me in the other arm. The whole place was just really wild then and I guess I ran toward the front door and got out to my pick-up which was parked right in front of the front door #

Plaintiff contends that defendants owed him a duty to have employed precautions so that any disorderly person entering the restaurant would be subject to reasonable restraint. The complaint alleges that defendants were negligent in allowing on the restaurant premises David and Jeff Hale, persons known to defendants as having violent and disorderly propensities, in allowing disorderly conduct on the premises and in failing to provide employees to maintain order.

The only personnel working in the restaurant at the time of the foray were a cook, a dishwasher and a waitress, all women.

There was evidence of previous disturbances in the restaurant. The city policeman testified that there had been a previous violent altercation with the Hale brothers in the same restaurant about a year before. A deputy sheriff testified that he was called to the restaurant “numerous times for different drunks, fights.” The waitress testified that during the thirteen days she had worked immediately previous to the night in question, there had been “a few ‘hassles’.” The waitress testified that the Hale brothers, the first victim, two other men and a woman had been customers in the cafe and had left “ten to fifteen minutes” before their eventful return.

There was no telephone on the restaurant premises by which the police could be called. There was a pay phone in a booth across the street, and the police could be signalled for help .by flipping an electric switch [629]*629which turned the light off in the cafe’s street sign. There was no evidence that anyone switched off the light on the night in question. The cook testified that after the first altercation she took a dime and started for the back door en route to the pay phone across the street to call the police, but met David Hale returning to the restaurant. He “had a knife in his hand and had it opened and he grabbed me by the throat and shoved me against the machine that cuts french fries and he told me to get back in and stay there or he would cut my head off.” She complied.

Plaintiff contends that this evidence was sufficient to entitle him to have the case submitted to the jury.

The owner of a restaurant, amusement place, tavern, or inn owes his business guests a duty of ordinary reasonable care to protect them from injury at the hands of other patrons while on the premises. Peck v. Gerber, 154 Or 126, 59 P2d 675, 106 ALR 996 (1936).

We hold that the evidence in this case is not sufficient to permit the jury to find that defendants negligently caused plaintiff’s injury. It would be unreasonable for the jury to find that defendants could have anticipated and should have been prepared for the contingency that two men crazed with drink, wildly chasing their quarry, would burst into the restaurant, criminally assault their victim and thus draw into the fray a sympathetic bystander in the restaurant. There is no evidence that anything previously occurring in the restaurant would have given defendants reason to believe that such a wild affray would erupt from the street.

Even if a restaurant owner has the duty under some circumstances to employ personnel who are capable of keeping order and thus protect his patrons [630]*630from injury resulting from the foreseeable conduct of his patrons, he is not required to employ such personnel for the contingency that outsiders will elect to use the restaurant rather than the street as their battleground. The fact that the Hale brothers had previously been in the restaurant gave defendants’ employees no warning that they would stir up trouble and suddenly return to burst into the restaurant. It is the responsibility of the public police to quell such disturbances whether they occur on the street or in a restaurant. And even where previously violence has swept in from the streets, we do not think that it should be the duty of a businessman operating a restaurant to risk his own life or employ others to risk theirs in order to protect bystanders who happen to be in the restaurant rather than on the street. That is a function which he should be able to leave to government police.

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Rosensteil v. Lisdas
456 P.2d 61 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
456 P.2d 61, 253 Or. 625, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosensteil-v-lisdas-or-1969.