This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment entered upon a directed verdict for the defendant in an action against San Francisco Ball Club, Inc., fo’ damages for personal injuries sustained while attending a professional baseball game at Seals’ Stadium, San Francisco.
Rn; appeal is also from an order denying plaintiff’s motion io in w trial. That phase of the appeal should be dismissed, in ji'ch an order is not appealable.
j ^pellant. a woman of 46 years, attended the game as the giest of friends, one of whom furnished and purchased the tikets which were for seats in an unscreened portion of the sta^um near the first-base line. The game was in progress arrived and about an hour later the accident ^while the players were changing sides. Appellant some object and sustained serious injury. Evi *486 denee is lacking whether or not it was a baseball, or froin what direction it came. However, the motion for directed verdict appears to have been made, and the issues discussed by the parties upon this appeal, upon the assumption that appellant was hit by a baseball, possibly thrown from second to first base, touching the first baseman’s glove and passing thence into the stand.
Respondent owned and operated the stadium which had a seating capacity of 18,601, divided into screened and unscreened areas. Approximately 5,000 seats were behind a screen back of the home plate. The remainder were unscreened and in two sections behind the first-base and third-base lines respectively. Tickets for seats were sold at separate windoWss, one window for each of these three sections, each window marked for a particular section. Patrons decided where they would sit, and went to the appropriate window for their seats. It is generally true of all the games held in this stadium that a great majority of the patrons are situated in the unscreened sections, because they prefer an unobstructed view. ;
The attendance at this particular game was approximately 5,000. There were many vacant seats in each seating area. Most of the spectators were seated in the first-base and third-base unscreened sections, very few in the home-plate screened area.
For this game, held October 14, 1945, after the close of the Pacific Coast League season, respondent rented the stadium to others and had no control over the conduct of the game or the players; nor did it publicize the game or fix the admission price. Ticket sales at the stadium were handled by respondent’s employees and the ushers who escorted patrons to their seats were its employees. The rental charged was a percentage of the gross receipts, not of the profits.
Accordingly, the duty of care, if any, which respondent owed to appellant was that of proprietor, toward a patron, of the stadium at which this game was played.
The applicable general principle is that the owneiiof property, insofar as an invitee is concerned, is not an inshfer of safety but must use reasonable care to keep his premies in a reasonably safe condition and give warning of latnt or concealed perils. He is not liable for injury to an ingfcee resulting from a danger which was obvious or should haj^fcn observed in the exercise of reasonable care.
American Olive Co.,
In baseball, one of these factors is that the patron participates in the sport as a spectator and in so doing subjects himself to certain risks necessarily and usually incident to and inherent in the game; risks that are obvious and should be observed in the exercise of reasonable care. This does not mean that he assumes the risk of being injured by the proprietor !s negligence but that by voluntarily entering into the sport as a spectator he knowingly accepts the reasonable risks an 4 hazards inherent in and incident to the game.
The duty of the proprietor or operator of a baseball stadium toward his patrons is specifically defined, as follows: “ ‘With respect to the law governing cases of this kind, it has been generally held that one of the natural risks assumed by spectators attending professional games is that of being struck by batted or thrown balls; that the management -3 not required, nor does it undertake to insure patrons nst injury from such source. All that is required is the tí* \ ise of ordinary care to protect patrons against such iii-c. -3
(Edling
v.
Kansas City Baseball etc. Co.,
181 Mo.App. ■ -:7 [
It would seem necessarily to follow that respondent fully discharged its duty toward appellant, as concerns the risk to her of being hit by thrown or batted baseballs, when it provided screened seats for all who might reasonably be ' expected to request them, in fact many more screened seats than were requested. Hence, the injury suffered by her when struck by a thrown ball, while voluntarily occupying an unscreened seat, did not flow from, .was not caused by, any failure of performance by respondent of any duty owed her, and did not give rise to a cause of action in her favor against respondent for damages for such injury.
Appellant seeks to take this case out of the application of the rule upon the theory that she was ignorant of the game of baseball and the attendant risks, hence cannoFbe said \ to have knowingly assumed the risk. The point is not well taken. Although she had a limited experience with baseball, she was a mature person in possession of her faculties with nothing about her to set her apart from other spectators and require of her a lower standard of self-protection from obvious, inherent risks than that required of other spectators. She /was, at the time of the accident, 46 years of age; had lived in the San Francisco area since 1926; was about to go to a school for training and to have a job as saleswoman in a real estate office; had seen one baseball game prior to this, in 1928, played in a big field, not a ball park, when she observed the game from an automobile and did not see balls thrown or knocked into the crowd; and had seen kids in the street pitching balls. At the game at which this accident happened she knew there was no screen in front of her seat but failed to notice if any of the seats were behind a screen. She was in attendance for about an hour before the accident, which should have apprised her of the risk of being struck by a ball. Ihstead of observing, she paid ho particular attention to the game and *489 spent her time visiting with a friend. We find nothing here to take appellant outside the usual rule, whether it be said that this “common knowledge” of these obvious and inherent risks are imputed to her or that they are obvious risks which should have been observed by her in the exercise of ordinary care.
Similarly, in the Quinn case, plaintiff urged.that because she was a minor of 14 years and went to the game alone, thé question whether she sufficiently understood the risk of being hit by a ball when sitting in an unscreened section was necessarily for the jury. In overruling this contention, the court observed that the evidence showed that Quinn was a “high school student, strong, mentally alert, weighing about 125 pounds, and active in several kinds of athletics, including baseball.” (
Even more like the instant case on its facts is
Brisson
v.
Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Ass’n,
.^Another case quite like the instant case upon its facts is
Keys
v.
Alamo City Baseball Co.
(Tex.Civ.App.),
^ Continuing, the court held that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in disregarding the jury finding that defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to warn plaintiff of the dangers incident to occupancy of the unscreened area, saying in that regard: “Plaintiff was a mature woman, presumably possessed of average intelligence, with nothing about her manner or appearance to set her apart from the thousands of other patrons entering the park on this occasion, or to indicate her claimed inexperience or lack of appreciation of the perils of the game. Her own son, sitting at her side, with full knowledge of those perils and of the extent of his mother’s awareness, did not warn her. It would have been absurd, and no doubt would have been resented by many patrons, if the ticket seller, or other employees, had warned each person entering the park that he or she would be imperiled by vagrant baseballs in unscreened areas. And yet that would have been defendant’s duty, if plaintiff’s contention is sound. We overrule that contention.’”X150 S.W.2d, at p. 371.)
*492
Of the eases relied upon by appellant herein, only one,
Ratchiff
v.
San Diego Baseball Club,
We conclude that the evidence herein, viewing it most favorably to the appellant, does not take her outside the application of the.rule announced in the Quinn case; that she assumed the risk of injury in respect to which she complains; that the injury was not caused by any negligence upon the part of the respondent; and that determination thereof was a proper function of the trial court upon motion for directed verdict.
In the absence of negligence upon the part of the respondent, it is unnecessary to consider the question of contributory negligence upon the part of the appellant.
The judgment is affirmed and the appeal from the order denying a new trial is dismissed.
Peters, P. J., and Bray, J., concurred.
