Strand Enterprises, Inc. v. Turner

78 So. 2d 769, 223 Miss. 588, 47 A.L.R. 2d 1431, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 414
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1955
Docket39551
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 78 So. 2d 769 (Strand Enterprises, Inc. v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strand Enterprises, Inc. v. Turner, 78 So. 2d 769, 223 Miss. 588, 47 A.L.R. 2d 1431, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 414 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

*597 Holmes, J.

This is an attachment suit in chancery brought by the appellee in the Chancery Court of Winston County against the appellants, Strand Enterprises, Inc., a nonresident corporation, and Fletcher Tingle, Jr., a resident *598 of Neshoba County, and against Otiss Boyles, a resident of Winston County.

The appellee sought by her original bill to recover of the appellants both actual and punitive damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the appellee and caused by the negligence of the appellants, and to subject by attachment real estate owned by the non-resident defendant in Winston County, and to bind in the hands of the said Otiss Boyles funds and effects in his hands belonging to and owing to the said nonresident defendant.

After hearing the evidence, the chancellor rendered a decree in favor of the appellee and against the appellants for actual damages in the sum of $10,000, and from this decree the appellants appeal.

The material facts as shown by the testimony of the appellee are substantially as follows: The appellee owned a brick building in the City of Philadelphia, Mississippi, and on November 1, 1950, by agreement in writing, leased the same to Strand Enterprises, Inc., for a term of five years. The building had theretofore been converted by a former tenant for use in the operation of a moving picture theater. Strand Enterprises, Inc., used the building in the operation of a moving picture theater under the name of Pix Theater. It also operated another moving picture theater in the City of Philadelphia at a different location under the name of the Strand Theater. The appellant, Fletcher Tingle, Jr., was the manager of both theaters and in full charge thereof, and maintained his office in the Strand Theater. Strand Enterprises, Inc., employed a janitor, Charlie Jordan, for both theaters. He carried a key to both theaters and was left in charge of both theaters when Tingle was out of town. The Strand Theater operated seven days a week, and the Pix Theater operated only two days a week, namely, on Friday and Saturday. During the non-operating days of the Pix Theater, the same was kept locked, with keys *599 thereto in the possession of Tingle and Charlie Jordan, and no one was admitted thereto except by Tingle or Charlie Jordan.

Under the terms of the lease, the lessor was obligated to make all necessary repairs to the exterior of the building, and the lessee was obligated to maintain the interior of the building. From time to time leaks developed in the roof of the building, and upon being notified of the same by Tingle, the appellee promptly sent someone to repair the leaks. During the closed periods of the Pix Theater, the appellee had no access thereto unless admitted by the manager or janitor. After leasing the building to Strand Enterprises, Inc., and prior to the injuries complained of, the appellee had never been in the building except on one occasion when she went with Tingle up a small flight of stairs behind the projection room to look at an outside awning which was reported to her to be out of repair. She had never, prior to her injuries, gone in the main auditorium or the storage room to the rear thereof. During April or May, 1953, there was a heavy wind and rain storm which damaged a flue in the roof and caused leaks therein and on being notified of this condition by Tingle, the appellee sent a competent roof man to make the necessary repairs. During a subsequent rain it developed that the roof still leaked. Tingle notified the appellee of this condition and told her that property of Strand Enterprises, Inc., was being damaged, and requested her to come to the building during a rain and examine the situation from the inside and ascertain where the leaks were and what property of the lessor was being damaged, with a view of correcting the situation and protecting the property of the lessor, and further told her that he would unlock the building and let her in and that if he was not in his office she could have the colored boy who carried a key to the building unlock the same and let her in. Later, during a rain on July 20, 1953, which was a Monday, and a *600 day when the Pix Theater was closed and locked, the appellee went to Tingle’s office with a view of entering the building to see where the leaks were and to see what damage, if any, was being done to the property of Strand Enterprises, Inc., and with a view of correcting the situation, all in accordance with the request theretofore made of her by Tingle. She found the janitor, Charlie Jordan, engaged in cleaning up, assisted by a colored boy named Johnnie Poe. The appellee had observed Poe assisting Jordan many times before for a long period of time. Poe was not paid by Strand Enterprises, Inc., but was paid by Jordan.

The appellee inquired for Mr. Tingle and was told that he was not in. She then made known her mission to Jordan, and told him of Mr. Tingle’s request that she go in the building and of his statement that if he, Tingle, was not in, the boy with the keys would admit her to the building. Jordan took the keys from his pocket and gave them to Poe and told Poe to go with appellee and show her through the building. The appellee went with Poe, who unlocked the front of the building and admitted her. She went through the auditorium and through an exit which was covered by a curtain and which led to the storage room, and through a narrow passageway which led through an abandoned ladies ’ rest room. There was a globe socket in the ceiling but no bulb was in it. While it was daylight on the outside, it was only dimly lighted inside. The appellee viewed the roof and looked to see what property of the Strand Enterprises, Inc., had been damaged. She observed a small room at the southwest corner of the building which had formerly been a men’s rest room, and started to this room to see if it contained any property of Strand Enterprises, Inc., which had been damaged. As she started through a narrow space between a small stairway and the wall, she stepped in a hole in the floor and sustained severe injuries. The hole was about twelve inches wide, two feet *601 long, and two or more feet deep. The hole had been there for more than two years and it was claimed by Tingle that it was the result of rotting caused by water leaking down the wall and onto the floor. The appellee testified that the hole was wholly unguarded, and that she had never been told of its existence by Tingle, nor requested to repair it by Tingle, and that she did not know of its existence. She further testified, in denial of Tingle’s testimony that he kept the passageway to the hole guarded by a sixty-gallon steel drum, that there was no such object guarding the hole at the time she sustained her injuries, but that she had seen a steel drum on the outside of the building.

The appellant Tingle wholly denied the testimony of the appellee, denying that he had requested her to go in the building for the purpose of examining the leaks in the roof and seeing about the property of Strand Enterprises, Inc., which was claimed to be damaged, and further testified that he had told the appellee about the hole in the floor and had requested her to repair it. He admitted that he knew the hole was dangerous, but said that he kept it guarded by the steel drum.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 2d 769, 223 Miss. 588, 47 A.L.R. 2d 1431, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strand-enterprises-inc-v-turner-miss-1955.