Tulsa Entertainment Co. v. Greenlees

1922 OK 71, 205 P. 179, 85 Okla. 113, 22 A.L.R. 602, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 28, 1922
Docket10362
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1922 OK 71 (Tulsa Entertainment Co. v. Greenlees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tulsa Entertainment Co. v. Greenlees, 1922 OK 71, 205 P. 179, 85 Okla. 113, 22 A.L.R. 602, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 46 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Tulsa county by Charles At Greenlees, as plaintiff, against the Tulsa Entertainment Company, a corporation, Arthur B. Reece, and certain others, as defendants.

On the trial of the case a demurrer to the evidence was sustained as to certain of the defendants. The case was submitted to the jury as to 'the remaining defendants, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the Tulsa Entertainment Company, a corporation, and Arthur B. Reece for the sum of $5,000 damages. Thereafter these defendants filed their motion for a new trial and moved for judgment in their favor and against 'the plaintiff non obstante veredicto. These motions were overruled by the court and judgment rendered in accord with the verdict. The defendant Tulsa Entertainment Company perfected this appeal, and . appears here as plaintiff in error.

The facts, briefly stated, are .as follows: During the fall of 1913, two baseball teams, one known as the Chicago Wlr te 'Sox, the other as the New York 'Giants, made a tour of the world, playing exhibition baseball games. Arthur B. Reece and his associates negotiated with the managers of these team-s to have an exhibition game played at Tulsa. They were not the owners of any baseball park where such game could be conveniently played or where comfortable accommodations could be furnished the public 'to witness the game. They went to Morris McGrath, one of the defendants, who was president of the .Tulsa Entertainment Company, the owner of the grounds and' ball park referred to in this action. At 'the .time complained of the legal title to the grounds stood in the name of Charles A. Elliff, who held it as trustee for the Tulsa Entertainment Company; he ■thereafter' conveyed the legal title to the Tulsa Entertainment Company. Mr. Morris McGrath consented that Reece and his associates might have the use of the grounds, and they completed their arrangements to have the exhibition baseball game played at Tulsa.

Some of the officers and parties interested in the Tulsa 'Street Railway Company were officers of and interested in the Tulsa Entertainment 'Company. Morris McGrath, the president of the Tulsa Entertainment Company, was also connected with the Tulsa Street Railway Company. The baseball grounds were on one of the car lines of the Tulsa Street Railway Company.

During their negotiations Mr. McGrath had asked for ten per cent, of the gate receipts for the use of the grounds, but Mr. Reece had urged the proposition that the Tulsa -Street Railway Company would greatly benefit by the fares collected from the large number of people who would attend the game, and Mr. McGrath had finally consented that Reece and his associates should have the use of the grounds without payment of any sum of money or division of the gate receipts.

Mr. Reece called the attention of Mr. Mc-Grath to the defective condition of the seats in the grandstand and bleachers, but Mr. McGrath replied that the Tulsa Street Railway Company would not spend any *115 money on. repairs, but that the repairs would have to be made by Mr. Reece. Sometime before the game was played Mr. Reece bought out his associates in the enterprise, and 'they were not thereafter interested in it.

On the 28th day of October, 1913, the baseball game was played on the grounds owned by the Tulsa Entertainment Company. Its gates were thrown open to admit any and all of the public who purchased admission tickets. There were certain individuals in charge to direct the holders of tickets 'to the part of the grandstand and bleachers that such holder or holders should occupy during the time the game was being played. The plaintiff, Charles A. Greenlees, was directed to occupy a seat in that part of the arena known as the bleachers. While he so occupied a seat in the bleachers, the particular section where he was seated broke, gave way, and he was precipitated to the ground a distance of some 15 feet or more, and thereby broke both of his ankles and was otherwise bruised, shocked, and injured.

The plaintiff in error sets out 14 assignments of error, and in its brief discusses the various assignments of error under three heads. We will consider them in the order presented in the brief of plaintiff in error.

“The petition alleges that the bleachers on which the plaintiff sat were overcrowded and were crowded beyond safety and to the extent that they were dangerous. This allegation of the petition was specifically admitted in the answer of the defendant. Thereby the overcrowding of the bleachers became a fact in the action.”

In presenting this proposition the Tulsa Entertainment Company picked out a part of a paragraph in the petition of the plaintiff below and admitted this particular part to be true. Having admitted this fact, the plaintiff in error contends that it was not responsible for the overcrowding of the bleachers, and it is therefore relieved of liability.. A petition, like any other written instrument, must be construed as a whole. A person could 'take almost any instrument and pick out a sentence or part of a sentence which, disconnected from all- other ■reference to the instrument, would be antagonistic to the intent and purpose of the instrument construed as a whole. The plaintiff in error has culled a part of a sentence out of the fourth paragraph of the petition, which paragraph reads as follows:

“Fourth: That the said baseball ground was at the time aforesaid and for a number of years prior, thereto had been to the knowledge of the defendants a place of public entertainment resorted to by a large .number of people for the purpose of witnessing athletic entertainments and other sports and amusements; that 'the stands and bleachers thereof 'had been to the knowledge of said defendants unsafe and insecure for a long time prior to. the said 28th day of October, 1913, and had been and were to their knowledge inadequately, negligently, and carelessly constructed and maintained; that they were made, and constructed of' timbers of. a size too, Small and of a kind of wood too weak and too much subject!to decay for the purpose for which it was used; that the said stands and bleachers, upon the occasion aforesaid and particularly the bleachers in which the plaintiff sat were crowded beyond their seating capacity and beyond the point of safety and to such an extent as to render it unsafe for the persons occupying the same, all to the knowledge of the defendants ; 'that the aforesaid injuries of the plaintiff were occasioned solely and wholly by the negligence and want of care of the defendants and that thereby the plaintiff was injured and damaged to the extent and in the sum of thirty thousand dollars (•$30,009.00) in addition to the expenses of medical treatment which he had been put to and in the future will be put.”

In this paragraph the plaintiff alleged the defective condition of the grandstand and bleachers; that the same were negligently and carelessly constructed; the size • of the timbers were too small; the timbers too weak and badly decayed and the bleachers were crowded beyond 'their seating capacity and beyond the point of safety. The reason they were crowded beyond their seating capacity and point of safety was because of the defective condition of the bleachers. If the bleachers had been substantially built with timbers of .

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 71, 205 P. 179, 85 Okla. 113, 22 A.L.R. 602, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsa-entertainment-co-v-greenlees-okla-1922.