315 Mass. 42 | Mass. | 1943
The defendant operates a restaurant or lunch. room in which the customer goes to a counter, behind which there are countermen, orders his food, which is placed on a tray by the counterman, and takes it to a table. The plaintiff went to the restaurant for the purpose of purchasing food, and, while purchasing it, asked an employee at the counter "if he could go to the men’s room.” The counterman told him to "'Go straight through that door,’ — There is a swing door there. 'Go right through that door and it is down stairs.’” The plaintiff opened the door, took a few steps, slipped, and fell down a flight of stairs, sustaining injuries for which he seeks to recover damages in this action.
There was evidence that there was a cashier near the entrance and exit of the restaurant, and that a manager or assistant manager was on duty. The plaintiff testified that when he went through the door, which was indicated, there
The plaintiff entered the defendant’s restaurant as an invited customer. The important question to be determined is whether he continued to be an invitee while on his way to the toilet room. He asked permission to go to the men’s room. The case at bar resembles the case of McNamara v. MacLean, 302 Mass. 428, where the plaintiff asked permission to use the toilet. The defendant, an individual, gave permission, but said that the toilet was in the cellar and was for the use of employees. The defendant lifted the hatch cover or trap door that covered the steep narrow stairway that led to the cellar, and told the plaintiff to be careful in going down and to put her hand on the railing. It was held that, although the plaintiff was an invitee in the store, on the evidence she was a bare licensee on the stairway (see cases cited at pages 428-429), and that the presence of the defendant, and her express permission to use the toilet, gave the plaintiff no higher standing. It is true that in the McNamara case the plaintiff was told that the toilet was for the use of employees. In the case at bar, the jury could have disbelieved the defendant’s evidence that the toilet was main
It is unnecessary to consider whether the counterman was authorized either to invite or to permit the plaintiff to go to the wash room. See Coulombe v. Horne Coal Co. 275 Mass. 226, 230; Denny v. Riverbank Court Hotel Co. 282 Mass. 176, 179; Lanstein v. Acme White Lead & Color Works, 285 Mass. 328, 331; Sokoloski v. Splann, 311 Mass. 203, 207-208.
Judgment for the defendant.