This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries received on November 25,1951, in Peabody when a seat in a theatre maintained and operated by the defendant collapsed. There was evidence that while the plaintiff, who was a ticket holder, was “watching the show,” the seat in which he was sitting “suddenly collapsed,” and he fell to the floor. A bolt which had come out of the seat was later found. The seat was one of the five hundred or six hundred wooden seats which were provided for patrons. “[XTjhildren would come into the theatre building sometimes to play and break the seats.” On this evidence, which was all that was offered by the plaintiff on liability, the defendant rested. Its motion for a directed verdict was denied subject to its exception. A verdict for the plaintiff was returned and recorded under leave reserved to enter a verdict for the defendant. Thereafter the defendant filed a “motion for judgment in accordance with leave reserved” which the judge allowed. The plaintiff then excepted.
The defendant owed to the plaintiff, a business visitor, the duty to exercise reasonable care in maintaining the seat which he was expected to occupy in a reasonably safe condition.
Hale
v.
McLaughlin,
The principle has been applied in cases involving the unexplained derailment of a railway car
(Gilchrist
v.
Boston Elevated Railway,
The jury would be warranted in finding that the unexplained collapse of the seat in question while being used in a normal manner was due either to defective construction or to lack of repair, and that its unsafe condition was more likely attributable to negligence on the part of the defendant than to some other cause.
Brennan
v.
Ocean View Amusement Co.
So ordered.
