[Download] "Rynn v. Fox New England Theatres" by Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Rynn v. Fox New England Theatres
- Author : Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
- Release Date : January 31, 1938
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 66 KB
Description
COX, Justice. The plaintiff and her daughter were rightfully in the defendants moving picture theatre. Upon the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, it could have been found that an usher conducted them about half way down an aisle which sloped toward the stage and in which there were no steps or stairs of any kind. It was dark in the theatre, and a picture was then being shown. The usher indicated that they should take some vacant seats on their left which were in some distance in a row at right angles to the aisle. In order to reach the seats it was necessary for them to pass in front of several persons who were seated at their left in the row. The usher had no flashlight, or if she had one she did not use it, and said nothing about their being a difference in level in the floor in front of the row of seats which the plaintiff and her daughter had to pass. There was a difference in level there consisting of a perpendicular drop of five or six inches from the level of the floor upon which the plaintiff and her daughter were walking in front of that row to the level of the floor upon which the row of seats at their right was placed. The existence of this difference in level was unknown to the plaintiff. It was so dark that she did not observe it, and the first she knew of it being there was when one foot went off the edge and she fell. When she fell her body went down on the floor partly into the space bounded by the edge of the step along which she had been walking and the back of the row of seats at her right. There was further evidence that the lighting conditions in the theatre were those ordinarily found in the average moving picture theatre; and that the step and arrangement of the seats were similar to the arrangement of the seats and step where the jury were sitting; that there was no difference in level in the floor of the space between the rows of seats along which the plaintiff was walking; that the space between the seats on the plaintiffs right and the backs of the seats on the plaintiffs left at the place where she fell was wider than the space between other rows of seats in the theatre; and that there was no other difference in level in the floor in front of any other row of seats in the whole theatre. There was no evidence of any defect in the passageway or in the construction of the step itself.