26 A.2d 461 | Pa. | 1942
Plaintiff was injured by the negligent operation of an amusement device called Tilt-a-Whirl in the amusement park known as Conneaut Lake Park, which was owned and operated by the Hotel Conneaut, Inc., defendant-appellee. She sued the corporation, Charles Huntley and C. D. Clark, and put in evidence sufficient to sup, port a finding that her injury resulted from negligent operation. The defendants elected to put in no evidence. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff against all three defendants. The appellee moved for judgment n. o. v. for lack of evidence against it. The motion was granted and plaintiff appealed. The question is whether there was evidence to go to the jury to support a finding that appellee failed to exercise that measure of care to an invitee required of an invitor.
The park contains 976 acres, and was owned and operated by appellee, a fact admitted in its affidavit of defense and by Mr. Foley, its Vice-President, called for cross-examination. He testified the defendant operated Conneaut Hotel in the park, and a number of so-called amusements, specifying among them, the Beach Club, a restaurant and floor show for patrons, bath houses, boat houses, bowling alleys, a golf course, a dance hall. It *12 frequently maintained "an office in the Park where people may go who are interested in purchasing tickets permitting them to ride on concessions and all devices at the park, . . ." It maintained a park police force. It extensively advertised its park and amusement facilities as "Western Pennsylvania's Favorite Playground." The record contains more evidence to the same effect, but that is sufficient to give some idea of the place. Appellee's invitation to the public was clearly shown.
The plaintiff testified that on July 20, 1938, while in the park, she went to this Tilt-a-Whirl and "paid the man a quarter for the ride for the little boy and myself." He put the device in motion, and, as the jury may have found, his inattention to duty with respect to its operation resulted in injury to plaintiff. Afterward, she made inquiry of Mr. Huntley, one of the defendants, who informed her "that he was supposed to be operating this device," but on that day "had gone to Ohio on business and left the young attendant to work the device while they were gone." She also testified that she communicated with Mr. Foley, appellee's Vice-President, who "referred" her to Mr. Clark, also a defendant. The evidence that has been printed does not clearly show the respective interests in the Tilt-a-Whirl of Huntley, Clark, or the appellee, and their relation to each other. As appellee's operation of the park has been admitted, it is immaterial, for present purposes, that plaintiff has not shown the precise nature of the arrangement between the defendants; if material to the appellee's defense, appellee would doubtless have put in evidence on the point.
The important fact is that the Tilt-a-Whirl was operated in the park owned and operated by the appellee, who invited the public to become patrons of the amusement devices. Having invited them, appellee was required to exercise the measure of care owing to invitees. In Haugh v. Harris Brothers AmusementCo.,
The applicable rule is stated in section 344 of the Restatement of Torts: "A possessor of land who holds it open to the entry of the public for his business purposes is subject to liability to members of the public entering for such purposes for bodily harm caused to them by his failure to exercise a reasonably careful supervision of the appliances or methods of an independent contractor or concessionnaire whom he has employed or permitted to carry on upon the land an activity which is directly or indirectly connected with his business use thereof."
Section 415 states: "A possessor of land who in the course of his business holds it open to members of the public, is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to them, on a part of the land retained in his possession or upon a part thereof leased to a concessionnaire, by his failure to exercise reasonable care to secure the use of reasonably safe equipment and methods by an . . . (b) independent contractor or concessionnaire employed or permitted to carry on upon the land an activity in furtherance of the possessor's business use thereof."
Such amusement park situations have been the subject of discussion in many jurisdictions.* In Frear v. ManchesterTraction, Light and Power Co.,
In Turgeon v. Connecticut Co.,
Plaintiff's evidence was therefore sufficient to go to the jury, and to cast upon appellee the burden of proving that it exercised the degree of care required in the circumstances.
The judgment is reversed; the record is remitted with instructions to enter judgment against Hotel Conneaut, Inc., on the verdict in favor of the plaintiff.