Ursprung v. Winter Garden Co.

183 A.D. 718, 169 N.Y.S. 738, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7927
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 A.D. 718 (Ursprung v. Winter Garden Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ursprung v. Winter Garden Co., 183 A.D. 718, 169 N.Y.S. 738, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7927 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The actions are to recover damages for alleged negligence, from which the plaintiff in the first action, Lulu Ursprung, sustained' personal injuries on the 10th day of September, 1915. The second action is by her father to recover the damages sustained by him in consequence of the injuries to his daughter, who was nineteen years of age. No question is presented by either appeal with respect to the amount of damages. For brevity, therefore, the daughter will be referred to as the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was desirous of obtaining a position as chorus girl and dancer at the Winter Garden Theatre, and at the suggestion of Mr. Jacob J. Shubert, the president of the Winter Garden Company, she took dancing lessons preparatory therefor, and thereafter and for about six weeks prior to the day of the accident she had’been rehearsing at the Winter Garden Theatre for the show known as the “ World of Pleasure.” As was customary, she furnished her own clothes for rehearsal. On the day of the accident she and other girls had been rehearsing in the morning and afternoon, and at about five p. m. the dancing instructor, who had been coaching them, read from a list handed to him by Mr. Shubert, who had witnessed the rehearsals, the name of the plaintiff and the names of five or seven other girls selected to appear in the show, and they were directed to go upstairs to be fitted for costumes. The rehearsals had been at the Winter Garden Theatre at the northeasterly corner of Broadway and Fiftieth street, in the borough of Manhattan, New York. One Lyon [721]*721owned the building adjoining the theatre on the north and extending to West Fifty-first street and from Broadway to Seventh avenue, the third or upper floor of which was substantially on a level with the roof of the theatre; and on the 3d of April, 1911, he leased said third floor to Floyd Grant for the period of five years from the-first of May thereafter. On the 28th of April, 1913, Grant sublet the premises to the Winter Garden Company for the balance of the term at an increased rental. At the time of the accident and for some time prior thereto, the Winter Garden Company used said third floor, among other things, for making, fitting and storing costumes. The plaintiff had never been to the fitting room, but some of the other girls had appeared in other shows at the Winter Garden Theatre and knew and led the way, and she followed. The way led up several flights of stairs behind the scenes in the theatre, to and across the roof, to a door which led into a room on the third floor of Lyon’s building, known as the mechanic’s room, from which a door led into a room known as the wardrobe room, in which there were costume racks and costumes; and from a passageway in that room between the costume racks a door led into a large room known as the shop, which extended the entire width northerly and southerly of Lyon’s building, and in which there were six or seven cutting tables, eight motor-driven sewing machines and two embroidering machines; and on passing through this room they came to the fitting room, which was in the Broadway and West Fifty-first street corner of the shop room. The plaintiff was fitted last. A companion waited to return with her, but all the others had returned. On returning through the room known as the shop, the plaintiff and her companion took a more southerly route, passing to the south of tables which, on entering, they had passed northerly of, and approached the partition between the wardrobe room and the shop room at a point about eleven feet southerly of the door through which they had entered, at which point, however, there was another door through the partition, and they passed out through it. The two doors were alike in appearance with the exception that they opened in opposite directions. The other girl could not be located and her testimony was not [722]*722taken. The testimony of the plaintiff is to the effect that they supposed they were leaving the shop room through the same door by which they had entered it; that the room they entered on leaving the shop room was somewhat dark, but that as they entered it a door was observable some twenty feet distant in a partition at the right; that they passed on to this door, on the assumption that-it was the door through which they had entered; that it opened inwardly toward them, and she thought it was partly open; that her companion took hold of the knob or other hold on the door and further opened it wide, and she stepped into the opening, and, recalling that they stepped up two steps in passing from the mechanic’s room into the wardrobe room, and thinking that this was the same place, she put her foot forward and with it felt for a step; that it was so dark she could not see anything and that she fell into the opening, which was the hoistway of an elevator, and sustained the injuries. The plaintiff says that as they passed through the wardrobe room on the way in, there was no difficulty in seeing, but that the costume racks and costumes tended to darken it. There were two electric lights in the room from which the door opened into the elevator shaft, but they were not lighted at the time of the accident. A woman in charge of the wardrobes testified that the wardrobe room was light when the girls went through on entering, and that she left the door between that room and the shop room open so that they might come back that way, and was standing in the wardrobe room into which the door opened, holding it open while about four of the girls passed out, and that later while she was so standing there she saw two young ladies come running along the hall or aisle from the fitting room as though they were excited, and that one of them was putting a middy blouse over her head, and that instead of coming to her door they must have • gone to the other door near the' elevator shaft, for she heard a scream shortly thereafter.

It is contended in behalf of each appellant that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to return from the shop room by the door through which she had entered it and in not retracing her steps when she encountered the darkness at the elevator shaft. We are of opinion that those [723]*723questions were properly left to the jury. These girls were naturally elated over having been selected for employment in their chosen vocation, and the jury were fairly warranted in finding that the plaintiff exercised such care as an ordinarily prudent person of her age and in her circumstances would have exercised. The door through which they entered the shop room and the one through which they left it appeared to be alike and were so near together that it cannot be said as matter of law that the plaintiff should have known that she was not leaving by the same door by which she had entered. She received no special instructions and no warning of danger. She had a right to return and, according to her testimony, believing that she was returning by the same route and that the passageway was safe, she was exercising all reasonable care. The evidence on that branch of the case fairly sustains the verdict. Counsel for appellants, however, contend that the jury were not properly instructed with respect to the duty devolving on the plaintiff. The court was requested to charge,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 A.D. 718, 169 N.Y.S. 738, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ursprung-v-winter-garden-co-nyappdiv-1918.