Shayne v. Coliseum Building Corp.

270 Ill. App. 547, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 549
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 23, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,229
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 270 Ill. App. 547 (Shayne v. Coliseum Building Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shayne v. Coliseum Building Corp., 270 Ill. App. 547, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 549 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal of the defendant James O. Mullen from a judgment entered in the superior court of Cook county on the jury’s verdict of $3,000 on account of personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by Solomon Shayne, plaintiff, as the result of a fall while attending a boxing exhibition in the Coliseum. The Coliseum Building Corporation was also made a party defendant, but the jury returned a verdict of not guilty as to the Coliseum company at the direction of the trial court.

The plaintiff’s declaration consisted of five counts, but it is indicated by the plaintiff that he relies on the second count which charges, in substance, that March 25, 1929, the plaintiff paid admission to and was in attendance at a boxing exhibition in the Coliseum building, which was promoted and conducted by James C. Mullen (hereinafter called the defendant); that the defendant negligently failed to properly police the affair and to have guards and ushers whose duty it was to stop fights, prevent disorder and protect the spectators from injury; that the defendant failed in his duty to stop a certain fight of spectators so that by reason of the premises the spectators became frightened and panic-stricken; and that by reason thereof there was an uncontrolled rush of people and the plaintiff was shoved off the balcony to1 the floor below and injured.

The evidence disclosed that there was an audience of white and colored people in attendance at the boxing show and that the principals in the main event which went on at 9:30 or 10 p. m. were Jackie Fields, a white boxer, and Jack Thompson, a colored boxer; that two colored men brandishing weapons engaged in an altercation shortly after the beginning of the seventh round of this bout; that some person shouted “fight” which was understood by others as a cry of “fire”; that a stampede of a large number of the patrons of the show ensued either because of the outcry of “fight” or “fire” or because of the altercation; and that the crowding, hurrying mass of people pushed or shoved the plaintiff from his chair and the balcony or platform upon which the chair stood, to the ground below.

It appears that all officials charged with the duty of requiring compliance with the city ordinances governing an exhibition of this sort and the premises in which such an exhibition is held performed their duty, and that after an inspection of the premises on the afternoon of the exhibition by representatives of the city electrical, fire and building departments, the erection and placing of the seats, the location and width of the aisles and the lighting arrangements were approved. The evidence further showed that 25 police officials and patrolmen were detailed in and around the Coliseum and that the defendant employed in addition thereto 10 Pinkerton men and 115 uniformed ushers. There were also 15 city firemen detailed there for that evening*.

It is conceded that the defendant as the promoter of a private boxing exhibition was not an insurer of the safety of his patrons and we believe that the correct rule as to the degree of care required of one so conducting a private boxing exhibition is that he exercise ordinary care to furnish a reasonably safe place for the exhibition and that he exercise ordinary care to protect his patrons from peril.

The burden is upon the plaintiff to show that reasonable notice of the impending danger had been given to the defendant and that it thereby became and was his duty to anticipate such a disturbance as occurred in the seventh round.

There is nothing in the evidence to indicate that the spectators in the section in question or the surrounding seats were in the least perturbed or fearful or in need of protection in the second round, third, fourth or any round up to the seventh because of any conduct of the men who afterward engaged in the altercation in the seventh round. There was nothing in the conduct of the patrons prior to the seventh round that indicated anything* extraordinary in the way of behavior of spectators at boxing* matches. There was no evidence of threats, vile utterances, violence, offers of violence and in fact there was nothing that could be construed as notice or warning that these men were dangerous persons from whom other patrons should be protected.

In the argument of the plaintiff in his brief filed in this case he uses this language: “Appellant has argued Ms case on the theory that there was no evidence of circumstances which wouM put him on notice of the likelihood of trouble. If it were true that there had been no events leading- up to the drawing- of the gun by the colored man and the fight and stampede which immediately resulted from that act, there might be some force to their arguments.”

The plaintiff thus concedes, in effect, that if the drawing- of the gun and the altercation in the seventh round were not preceded by such circumstances and events as would constitute notice or warning of the impending peril the defendant could not be held liable, but he strenuously urges that there were such circumstances and events leading- up to the occurrence in the seventh round and predicates his case on the theory that there was a continuing' altercation from the third to the seventh round that culminated in the drawing- of weapons and the fight in the seventh round, and that no officers or g-uards were stationed at the section where the altercation took place or, if -they had been so stationed, they had removed themselves to other positions, and contends that this continued altercation was or should have been sufficient notice to the defendant and his servants that there was impending danger' and that in the exercise of reasonable care for the protection of his patrons the defendant should haver reasonably anticipated the final altercation of the seventh round attended by the drawing of weapons. His theory that the altercation continued from the third to the seventh round is not supported by the facts in evidence and there is no force to the argument of the plaintiff based on this theory.

We find in this record evidence of laughing, yelling, bantering, talking and noise, which are the usual concomitants of prize fights or boxing matches. Bather than being unusual and extraordinary these are the natural, ordinary incidents of boxing matches. Such incidents surely cannot be held to be notice to the management that those thus engaged are likely to resort to acts which would cause a panic or stampede and it is under no duty nor has it the right to eject patrons on account of such conduct.

Nothing- that occurred prior to the seventh round could be regarded in law as sufficient notice of the drawing of a gun and the altercation which flared up without warning in the seventh round. It may well have been that the officers and ushers could have controlled the situation and subdued and ejected or taken into custody those engaged in the altercation without harm or injury to the plaintiff, or any other person, were it not for the outcry of “fight” or “fire” which immediately followed the display of the gun and knife and the threatened use of same. Whether the panic or stampede which ensued was caused by the outcry or by the altercation, it was caused by the sudden, unexpected act of a third person, over whom the defendant had no control and was an act not reasonably to be anticipated and "with no reasonable opportunity afforded to guard against it.

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270 Ill. App. 547, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shayne-v-coliseum-building-corp-illappct-1933.