This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial District of Jones County, Mississippi. The case was tried before the court and a jury. At the conclusion of the case, after the plaintiff and defendant had rested, the appellee made a motion for a peremptory instruction which was sustained by the court. The only assignment of error on this appeal is that the court erred in granting a peremptory instruction for the appellee.
The New Laurel Radio Station, Inc., a corporation, trading and doing business as Bowl-A-Way Lanes, operated a bowling alley in the City of Laurel. In the operation of this bowling alley, the appellee invited members of the general public to bowl for a consideration. In connection with the bowling operation and in the
As to the charge of the appellant that the appellee was negligent, the defense is to the effect that appellant was
The testimony is to the effect that the New Laurel Radio Station, doing business as Bowl-A-Way Lanes, owned and operated the bowling establishment on Beacon Street in the City of Laurel, Mississippi, on February 25, 1960, at which time the appellant was injured while bowling in appellee’s bowling alley; that the front entrance to the building faced towards the east and front on Beacon Street; that the lanes of alleys in which the bowling balls are rolled is in a general northeasterly and southeasterly direction and that located approximately in the center of the bowling establishment from the east to the west and immediately to the rear or south of the lanes in which the bowling was done was a control center or cashier’s stand, at which center the score sheets for bowling were obtained and the participants paid their fees for bowling. The concourse is approximately twenty-one to twenty-two feet in width and runs in an easterly and westerly direction the entire width of the building which is 142 feet. The concourse is used by bowling participants or any person who might be in the building as a general thoroughfare or walkway. To the south of the central stand in the south end and center of the building was located a snack bar or concession stand at which the appellee dispensed food and beverages to the general public who came into the bowling establishment. The snack bar or concession stand opened
The appellee’s testimony was to the effect that they knew that there was debris on the floor, that the cups were thrown there by the general public but this was back of the control center; that all this debris was back away from the cashier’s stand but there was none of it in the actual bowling area. The president, the manager and the superintendent of the appellee’s establishment were all there at the time that the appellant was injured and they knew about the condition and testified that it was clean from the cashier’s stand to the actual bowling area.
The appellant was a professional bowler, his average score at one time being* over 197 which was necessary in order to be a professional. He had run a bowling-establishment in another state for over eleven years. He knew that he should take care of his shoes and what to do in the care of his shoes.
This is a close case.
From the foregoing facts the question before the Court is, was the appellant, Elias, the sole and proximate cause of his injury; and as an experienced bowler, did he assume the risk involved in the game of bowling or was he guilty of contributory negligence'? Appellant’s only assignment of error is that the lower court erred in granting a peremptory instruction to the appellee.
In considering the motion for a peremptory instruction “everything must be considered or proved which evidence established, either directly or by reasonable inference, against party requesting instruction.” Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Jefcoats,
Since appellant was an invitee, it was the duty of the appellee to have and keep its bowling house in a reasonably safe condition. Patterson v. Sayers, d/b/a The Conrad Hotel,
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“The doctrine, accordingly, can apply only where a person may reasonably elect whether or not he shall expose himself to a particular danger; and it has no application where a continued exposure to risk is due to a lack of reasonable opportunity to escape after the danger is appreciated, or is the result of influence, circumstances, or surroundings which are a real inducement
No person can assume a risk that he does not know exists. The appellant was bowling some fifteen feet from the concourse area. It is true that he was called back up there but he did not know, and so testified, that he had stepped in the liquid substance until after his injury. His knowledge of the risks involved in bowling when his sliding shoe was wet and his knowledge of the prior condition of the concourse area were not what caused his injury. His injury was caused by his unknowingly stepping in the wet substance on the floor. In 19 Miss. L. J. p. 370, “The elements which must be found in order to constitute a defense of assumption of risk are generally stated in some such terms as follows: (1) Knowledge on the part of the injured party of a condition inconsistent with his safety; (2) appreciation by the injured party of the danger in the condition; and (3) a deliberate and voluntary choice on the part of the injured party to expose his person to that danger in such a manner as to register assent on the continuance of the dangerous condition.”
From the testimony we cannot believe that the appellant made a deliberate and voluntary choice to expose his person to that danger in such a manner as to register assent to the continuance of the dangerous condition around the concourse or cashier’s stand. He was called to the control center and he might have inadvertently forgot about the condition which existed there. If he did forget, he didn’t assume the risk but would have been guilty of contributory negligence. The assumption of risk arises from a mental state of willingness, or a mental state approaching consent. From the state of the evidence in the record, we" are unable to say
The next question before the Court is whether the plaintiff in this case was guilty of contributory negligence. In the case of Saxton, et al. v. Rose, et al.,
In the case of Watson v. Holeman,
In Gower v. Strain,
In Hatcher v. Daniels,
It is therefore manifest that the appellee was under the duty to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for those using them. With such a large crowd in the bowling alley, the appellee must have been guilty of negligence in maintaining the area around the control stand and in the concourse and in failing to keep the area clean. This negligence contributed to the appellant’s injury since the substance on his shoes stemmed from the negligent failure of the appellee to keep the area in question clean and reasonably free from water and other debris. The basis of the learned trial court’s peremptorial instruction for the appellee was that the appellant had assumed the risk of bowling and knowingly got the liquid on his shoes when he went to the control center.
Section 1454, Miss. Code 1942, Rec., provides that the fact that an injured person may have been guilty of contributory negligence “shall not bar recovery, but damages shall be diminished by the jury in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to the person injured. ’ ’
Section 1455, Code of 1942, Rec., provides: “All questions of negligence and contributory negligence shall be for the jury to determine.”
In Wilbe Lbr. Co. v. Calhoun,
In the case of Sea Food Co. v. Alves,
In a rec'i'i case on the question of assumption of risk, Siragusa v. Swedish Hospital,
On the question of games and theaters, bowling alleys, baseball parks, etc., see Hudson v. Craft, et al.,
We feel that this is a close question. However, we also feel that it is a case that should have gone to the jury under proper instructions as to the assumption of
Reversed and remanded.
