Drumwright v. North Carolina Theatres, Inc.

Barcthill, J.,

dissenting: The Court is here writing new law for this jurisdiction. In so doing the conclusion reached is, in my opinion, in direct conflict with former decisions of this Court in which it has been held repeatedly that where a plaintiff voluntarily proceeds under conditions of darkness which make it impossible to see where he is going he must suffer the consequences of his own negligence in so doing. I am, therefore, compelled to set forth to some extent the reasons I cannot concur in the majority opinion.

The facts plaintiff’s testimony tends to prove are these: The plaintiff entered the theater of defendant as a paying guest or invitee. The usher in the orchestra told her there were no seats downstairs; to go to the balcony. She and her two companions went to the balcony and while standing on the landing platform selected the seats they wished to occupy five rows down. They then proceeded down the aisle to the seats so selected. The two companions reached their seats in safety and plaintiff reached the fourth tier or row of seats where she stumbled or slipped and fell. What caused her to fall she does not know. Whether she stumbled over something a patron had left in the aisle she cannot say. Evidently, she says, her foot slipped off the edge of the step and that was what caused her fall. The balcony was constructed in the customary manner. The seats were tiered in stairway fashion. The risers between each tier on which the seats were located were of the same height and the seat platforms were of the same width. The picture was being shown at that time, and the theater was in semidarkness as a necessary part of the showing, and there was no illumination from seat or aisle lights. Ample light was furnished between each showing of the picture for departing patrons to leave and incoming patrons to enter and find seats in safety.

When plaintiff reached the balcony she found no usher. She knew the aisle was dark and she could not see the steps, but had to feel her way down to the selected seats. But she was too impatient to await assistance or lights. Instead she proceeded on down the aisle, fully aware of the darkened condition of the theater.

Wherein lies the negligence of the defendant? What wrongful or negligent act did it commit which has any causal connection with plaintiff’s injuries ? What fact or circumstance tends to exculpate plaintiff in regard to her conduct' in proceeding down the aisle, knowing she could not see where she was going or what danger lay ahead ?

She, as she is required to do, has picked out those acts of defendant which she contends constitute want of due care. She alleges that defendant was negligent in that it (1) failed to “safely and properly light” the landing platform and “the steps descending to the seating arrangement in the balcony of said Theater at least to the extent that a paid patron and invitee . . . descending steps at the express invitation of the defendant *330could at least see and not have to stumble along -in -the dark,” and (2) failed “to provide an usber with a dimmed flashlight to guide the plaintiff ■and her companions . . . and seat her and her companions safely, all of which is customary with all theater operators having due regard for the safety of their patrons.”

There is no allegation of any unusual, defective, or negligent construction of the aisle steps or that the balcony was not constructed in the customary manner. She does not allege that theaters of the type here involved customarily provide lights on the aisle steps during the showing of a picture. The nearest approach to proof thereof is the -statement of the plaintiff: “All the movies I have been to had lights on the steps.” When, where, or how many theaters she has attended is not disclosed. While she does allege that it is usual and customary to furnish ushers with dimmed flashlights to guide patrons seeking seats in the balcony section of the theater she does not offer any evidence to support the allegation.

While there are allegations of failure to light properly the approaches to the balcony, such allegations are immaterial here for the reason that she reached the balcony in safety. The condition of the light in the approaches through which she had passed in no wise contributed to her injuries: Hence Mulford v. Hotel Co., 213 N. C., 603, and like cases have no application here.

So then she must necessarily rely upon her allegation of insufficient light and failure to furnish an usher as the basis of her contention that defendant breached a duty it owed her as a paying patron of the theater.

What a man of ordinary prudence, in operating a business or trade, would do under given circumstances is ordinarily to be found in the usage or custom of that particular business. Neither court nor jury is permitted to set a standard of prudence from case to case as occasion arises. The standard is set by what men engaged in the same business or trade actually do under similar circumstances. Here there is a total lack of proof that, in operating a theater, seat or aisle lights and ushers are customarily furnished for the guidance of balcony customers.

But to meet this situation the majority suggest that the “direction” to go to the balcony committed defendant to light the way not only to the balcony but also down the steps to her seat. In support of this position, Johnson v. R. R., 130 N. C., 488, and kindred cases are cited. But those cases are not in point here. A passenger buys a ticket to a definite destination. It is the duty of the transportation company to stop at that point so that he may alight in safety. When instead of- stopping, the train merely slows down and the agent of the company directs the passenger to alight while the train is in motion, there is a definite and positive breach of duty and lack of due care. Even then when the jump*331ing or. alighting is obviously dangerous, the passenger is guilty of contributory negligence. See the Johnson and similar cases. Here the “direction” amounted to nothing more than information. The usher in effect said: “There are presently no available seats downstairs. If you go to the balcony you will find seats there.” This was no direction to seek to descend the steps unassisted and find a seat in the dark. It was '.entirely optional with plaintiff whether she should go to the balcony or wait downstairs. Certainly it was optional with her whether she should await the lights or undertake to find her way down in the dark.

Then finally the majority rely on Babinowitz v. Evergreen Amusement Corp., 244 N. Y. S., 43, where a judgment of nonsuit was reversed, as presenting “a closely-similar fact situation.” With this conclusion I ■ cannot agree. There the step which caused the plaintiff in that case to fall 'was deeper than the others. The court held that in'view of that fact the jury might find the failure to furnish a light to disclose this unusual situation was some evidence of negligence. This is sound, for it is well known that even in open daylight an irregular step of that type is likely to cause a person to lose his balance. But, in my opinion, with all deference to the majority, no such fact situation is disclosed here. See Schwartz v. International Vaudeville Co., 269 N. Y. S., 642, where the Babinowitz case is analyzed and distinguished. See also Decher v. Brooklyn Strand Theatre Corp., 225 N. Y. S., 813, affirmed on appeal, 249 N. Y., 580.

The combination of facts detailed and relied on in the majority opinion is not, in my opinion, sufficient. The direction to go to the balcony was an invitation to use the passageway to the balcony. Had the plaintiff been injured while traversing this passageway and it appeared- there was insufficient light therein, the situation would be different. But. she reached the balcony in safety. The balcony was in semidarkness — a condition essential to a successful showing of the picture, a fact of which plaintiff was aware. There were no seat or aisle lights, a fact which plaintiff observed — and there is no sufficient evidence that such are customarily used in the balcony during a showing of the picture. Falk v. Stanley Fabian Corp., 178 A., 740; Bosston v. Sullivan, 179 N. E. 173; Anno. 143 A. L. R., 68. The difference between the width of the treads or seat platforms and the step-downs is a necessary part of the construction of a balcony and there is no allegation of any defect or irregularity therein. While the plaintiff saw no usher in the balcony, there is no evidence tending-to show that it was the duty of defendant to furnish ushers there. Grand-Morgan Theatre Co. v. Kearney, 40 F. (2d), 235; Osborne v. Loew’s Houston Co., 120 S. W. (2d), 947; Anno. 143 A. L. R., 71. So then, no one of the facts relied on, in and of itself, indicates or warrants an inference of negligence. Can we say that these facts, in *332themselves innocent, in combination tend to prove negligence ? I cannot so agree. McKelvy v. Capitol Amusement Co., 159 So., 143; Loew’s Nashville & K Corp. v. Durrett, 79 S. W. (2d), 598.

The plaintiff could see the seats sbe and her companions wished to occupy. Her companions found their seats in safety. She could have done likewise if she had not for some unknown cause slipped and fallen. She knew that in due time lights would be turned on, and yet, being unwilling to wait, she voluntarily elected to descend steps with which she was not acquainted when she could not see where she was going.

“Assuming that .the plaintiff’s way down the steps was dark, she was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in proceeding down the steps, if it was so dark that she could not do so with safety.” Schwartz v. International Vaudeville Co., supra; Hudson v. Kansas City Baseball Corp., 164 S. W. (2d), 318, 142 A. L. R., 858; Columbia Amusement Co. v. Rye, 155 S. W. (2d), 727; Anno. 143 A. L. R., 77.

She walked into a curtain of darkness, knowing that the floor was not level and that she would encounter step-downs she could not see. In so doing she was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Dunnevant v. R. R., 167 N. C., 232, and cases cited. Groome v. Statesville, 207 N. C., 538; Beaver v. China Grove, 222 N. C., 234; Walker v. Wilson, 222 N. C., 66; Sibbitt v. Transit Co., 220 N. C., 702; McKinnon v. Motor Lines, ante, 132; Hardman v. Stanley Co. of Amer., 189 A., 886; Anno. 143 A. L. R., 77; Johnson v. Mathews-Moran Amusement Co., 106 P. (2d), 703.

On this record the plaintiff has, in my opinion, failed to offer evidence sufficient to be submitted to a jury. I can find no cause therein for disturbing the judgment of the court below. I therefore vote to affirm.