Smith v. Saenger Theatres Corporation

186 So. 866
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 5782.
StatusPublished

This text of 186 So. 866 (Smith v. Saenger Theatres Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Saenger Theatres Corporation, 186 So. 866 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff, while a paid patron of the Saenger Theatre in the city of Alexandria, Louisiana, had occasion to go to the toilet. He entered the commode closet, immediately emerging therefrom covered more or less with lye. His head, the upper and lower lids of one eye, his abdomen and his genital organs were all burned with second degree burns. He has filed this suit against the Theatre for damages for these injuries.

Cases involving injuries such as the plaintiff sustained seldom reach courts, but when they do it is very distasteful to have to write opinions in them. After reading the testimony, viewing the four large photographs of a man’s toilet and a like number of smaller photographs for a man’s more or less mutilated genital organs, all of) which is necessary in order to properly determine this case, we are left with a deep-seated feeling o'f nausea. But since courts cannot select the cases they are called upon to decide, any feeling of aversion we might have will be borne by us in silence.

*867 The facts of the case, as disclosed by the record, are as follows:

On December 13, 1937, plaintiff purchased a ticket and entered the Theatre operated by defendant. He remained inside until the feature was over, at which time, in answer to a call of nature, he came out of the show and entered the toilet provided for the patrons, for the purpose of relieving his bladder. Preceding him into the toilet were two men whom plaintiff did not know.

The toilet consisted of'one small room in which there was one urinal and in the corner of the room there was a commode closet. It was 34% inches in width and from the inside of the door to the commode is 22 inches. The door to the closet is 27% inches wide. The walls forming the commode closet do not extend to the ceiling of the room. It is 6 feet, 5% inches from the floor to the bottom of the casement over the commode closet. The casement consisted of three planed boards, one being used for the bottom and the other two for the inner and outer sides of the casement, making, so to speak, a trough over the door. To the left of the inside board of this casement from the floor was, therefore, 6 feet, 8% inches.

Although plaintiff’s weight and dimensions are not shown by the testimony, a picture of him which is in the record clearly shows him to be a large man, and the testimony discloses that he is 6 feet, one-half inch in height.

One of the men who preceded plaintiff into the toilet took possession of the urinal and plaintiff went into the commode closet. Immediately after the door closed, the two men who were in the toilet room heard a can fall and plaintiff emerged from the closet wiping his face and right eye. He wet his handkerchief in the lavatory and continued to wipe his eye. At that time there was a white substance of some kind on his head and shoulders. One of the men noticed the can on the floor, picked it up and smelled it, at which time he told plaintiff there was lye all over him. Plaintiff asked him to get somebody for him and this man, named Beaver, walked out, saw the Manager of the Theatre standing nearby and notified him that plaintiff had spilled lye on'himself and that he (the manager) had better go inside and see what he could do. The Manager did as requested and, finding plaintiff covered with lye, sent him immediately to his (the Manager’s) personal physician. Plaintiff’s burns were treated and he was sent home.

It is evident that plaintiff did not know the powder or crystals which had fallen on him was lye until he was told by Mr. Beaver, and until he rubbed his face and eye with a wet handkerchief which immediately started the lye to burn him. It was at that time 'he asked that help be sent him.

Plaintiff contends that defendant was negligent in leaving this can of lye above the door where it could fall on anyone making use of the toilet, and that it is liable therefore to him for the damages caused him by the injuries he received.

Defendant’s principal defense is that plaintiff carried the lye in with him and voluntarily put it on himself for the purpose of illegally and fraudulently recovering damages from it; and if that position be unsound, then it is not liable because the lye was placed there by some third person without the knowledge of defendant.

The lower court rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $131, and both plaintiff and defendant have perfected appeals to this court.

In order to intelligently discuss the first defense raised, we are forced to detail the injuries received by plaintiff. He was wearing a shirt with a soft collar attached. The two top buttons were unfastened and the collar standing open. All of the burns were second degree burns. The one near the center top of the head was of a size between a fifty-cent piece and a dollar. There were burns 'on the face in the proximity of the right eye, burns on both the upper and lower lids of this eye, and on the abdomen near the navel. Also there were several places on the scrotum. In the skin in the middle or anterior surface of the scrotum there was a deep circular burn much more severe than the rest and of a size between a five-cent piece and a twenty-five cent piece. He also had burns on the corona on the head of the glans penis and burns on the foreskin.

There is no dispute as to the above stated injuries, and it can readily be seen that two of the most sensitive members of a man’s physical makeup were the most severely injured. The two organs that men put forth more effort to protect, both voluntarily and involuntarily, than any other part of their anatomy. Yet we are asked by this defendant to find as a fact that plaintiff voluntarily and intentionally put lye on them. It is not *868 suggested or contended that plaintiff is insane or that he is abnormal. His testimony-in the record reveals him to be a rational, normal male of the age of 25 years, and the testimony would have to be strong and the preponderance great for us to sustain this -defense. The evidence defendant relies on to sustain this defense is weak and, in our opinion, almost if not entirely impeached. At the best, it is only suggestive.

It offered a man who drove a gasoline tank truck and who delivered gasoline to a station operated by one Dee Brady. This driver was unknown to plaintiff, yet he testified that at some time after December 13, 1937, the date of the accident and before trial, he knew not when, plaintiff in his presence told Dee Brady that he poured the lye on himself and that the insurance company had offered him $2,500, but his lawyer told him he could get more than that out of the case. A mere reading of this witness’ testimony is sufficient to discredit it, if there was nothing else, but Dee Brady took the stand and swore positively that plaintiff never at any time or anywhere made the statement or said anything that could be so construed in his presence. We again say there is no evidence of insanity on the part of plaintiff and for him to have remarked in the presence of a stranger that which the truck driver said would indicate insanity of the first degree. We cannot believe a man would be smart enough to frame a case as this plaintiff is charged with doing, and then immediately thereafter go out and inform strangers that he had done so.

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186 So. 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-saenger-theatres-corporation-lactapp-1939.