Plaintiff on 7 June 1958 was a 31-year-old musician and a member of Buddy Bair’s dance orchestra. On this day this orchestra was travelling in a bus, which about 7:00 o’clock p. m. stopped in front of the main entrance of defendant’s club building. The members of the orchestra carried their instruments and music from the bus into the club building to play for a dance there that evening. They returned to the bus, got in, and the -bus was driven a short distance to a parking area on the club’s premises and parked. The orchestra members remained in the bus about one hour, shaving, putting on their band uniforms, etc. The dance was to begin at 9:00 o’clock p. m. About 8:00 o’clock p. m. it was dark, and at that time plaintiff with two members of the orchestra stepped off the bus to go to the club building to set up their instruments and music and get ready for the dance. Plaintiff had never been on the club’s grounds before. Travelling on the club’s premises in the bus he was not able to get a *348 view of the grounds, because the bus had only four windows and by these windows were bunks and curtains.
When plaintiff stepped off the bus, he saw a gravel road leading to the club building and lights there. He and his two companions began walking down this road to the building and the lights. After they had walked 75 to 100 feet on this road, plaintiff realized they were going to the rear entrance of the building. He then saw the lights at the main entrance, where they had unloaded their instruments. Between him and the main entrance was a lawn of the club. The weather was clear. The lawn was Sat and level with no big gullies. The lights at the main and rear entrances gave a dim view of the lawn.
Plaintiff and his two companions started walking to the lights and the main entrance of the club building. Plaintiff was looking on the ground as he walked, and had walked “perhaps twelve feet,” when he fell in a hole on the lawn. The hole was about a yard in diameter and three or four feet deep. Grass was growing around the edge of the hole, and at the bottom of the hole were some tree roots. Near the hole were some trees and shrubbery, and the shrubbery cast shadows. Plaintiff testified, “the hole was invisible.” He played at the dance.
After the dance plaintiff went with a flashlight to see the hole in which he fell. He was back again in November 1958. In the area of the hole was the mouth of a drain pipe going under the road. The lawn slopes down from the club building to the road There was no ditch along the road, no gully. Plaintiff testified on cross-examination: “We knew there was a driveway of some kind that went from the front entrance to where the bus was parked. . . . Instead of going back and just finding the way the front entrance was from there, we cut across the lawn to the front entrance. We knew we were going across the lawn. We intentionally left the driveway to cross over the lawn. We left the driveway before I fell in the hole. We had traveled about 12 feet from the time we realized the road was leading to the back of the club before I fell into the hole. . . . The hole into which I fell was a step or two from the driveway. I had taken a few steps off the driveway before I fell in the hole.”
Plaintiff’s presence on the premises of the defendant at the time of his injury as a member of a dance orchestra to provide music for a dance in the club building gave him the status of an invitee.
Pafford v. Construction Co.,
Defendant owed plaintiff a positive duty to exercise ordinary care
*349
to have its premises in a reasonably safe condition for his safety in using the premises in a manner consistent with the purpose of the invitation, and to give him, when using the premises for such purpose, timely notice and warning of latent or concealed perils in so far as can be ascertained by reasonable inspection and supervision or are known by it and not by him. Defendant is not an insurer of plaintiff’s safety on its premises, and in the absence of negligence there is no liability.
Williams v. Stores Co., Inc.,
This is said in
Ellington v. Ricks,
The owner or person in charge of premises has a duty to keep the premises which are within the scope of the invitation in a reasonably safe condition for an invitee’s safety for all uses by an invitee in a manner consistent with the purpose of the invitation, but the owner or person in charge is not bound to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for uses which are outside of the scope and purpose of the invitation, for which the property was not designed, and which could not reasonably have been anticipated, except where he is present and actively cooperates with the invitee in the particular use of the premises.
Dickau v. Rafala,
This Court in
Quantz v. R. R.,
In
Money v. Hotel Co.,
In this case all the evidence shows that plaintiff fell into the hole and was injured, while intentionally and materially deviating from the premises which were within the scope of his invitation, and walking on a part of the premises not covered by his invitation — a part of the premises not designed as a road or path and the use of which for such purpose at night could not reasonably be anticipated by defendant. When plaintiff fell in the hole, he was a licensee, and the only duty defendant owed him is to refrain from acts of wilful or wanton negligence and from doing any act which increases the hazard to him while he is on the premises.
Coston v. Hotel,
Hood v. Coach Co., supra,
relied on by plaintiff, is distinguishable, in that the evidence shows only a slight departure from the driveway, which was within the scope of the invitation, by plaintiff “in the ordinary aberrations or casualties of travel” in order to get out of the way of a bus.
Leavister v. Piano Co.,
In our opinion, there is no evidence of actionable negligence on defendant’s part shown by plaintiff’s evidence.
But if we concede, which we do not, that the evidence makes out a case of actionable negligence against defendant, nevertheless, it is manifest that plaintiff's evidence establishes facts necessary to show .contributory negligence as a matter of law so clearly that no other conclusion can be reasonably drawn therefrom, in that plaintiff being unfamiliar with the premises left the provided road, and proceeded through darkness beyond the scope of his invitation to walk across a lawn on such premises without being able to see what dangers such darkness may conceal, and there being no circumstances to show he was misled through a false sense of safety, and there being no emergency or stress of circumstances rendering it necessary that he should cross the lawn and not use the provided road.
Curet v. Hiern,
(Louisiana App.),
In Johnson v. Mau, supra, plaintiff, while an employee of defendant was putting gas and oil in a car he was to use, went into a back part of the garage, which was pitch dark, and fell down an elevator shaft in the garage. The Court assuming he was an invitee said: “He went beyond the scope of his invitation when he started out to look for the water himself, and without making any inquiry or taking any precaution by the exercise of any of his faculties he stepped out into the darkness. Surely reasonable minds cannot differ on the question of his contributory negligence, and it follows that the defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted.”
In
Powers v. Raymond,
O’Neil v. See Bee Club,
(Ohio Court of Appeals),
“When it appears from all the evidence that the plaintiff ought not to recover, it is the duty of the court to say so.”
Houston v. Monroe,
The judgment of nonsuit below is
Affirmed.
