The plaintiff by this bill seeks to recover damages for personal injuries from the defendants as trustees and representatives of an unincorporated beneficial association. Upon the trial, at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the chancellor granted the defendants’ motion for a dismissal of the bill upon the ground that no negligence on the part of the defendant had been shown. To this action the plaintiff filed an exception.
In passing upon the correctness of the action of the chancellor, as in applications to take off a nonsuit, we must accept the testimony of the plaintiff and her witnesses as true. The testimony is to the effect that about 3 a. m. on November 17,1931, the plaintiff, being a registered paying guest at the Daniel Boone Hotel, owned by the defendants, was badly burned or scalded while taking a shower bath in the room assigned to her. She testified:
“The shower was a tub-shower, in the bath tub, and after taking my shower I tried to turn it off, and instead of turning it off it went around to the scalding hot water, and the easiest way to get from beneath the scalding water was to step to the side of the tub, instead of stepping out of the tub through the hot water. By then I had been badly scalded and called my mother, to ask her to turn off the hot water. She was unable to do so, so the only way I could get out of it was to throw myself through the hot water and fall to the floor. Mother called the desk and asked the bellboy to get first aid treatment, because the skin had been peeled from my arm. When the bellboy arrived she asked him to turn off the hot water. He was unable to do so himself and called for the night clerk, who turned it off with a pair of pliers.”
• When an innkeeper lets a room with bath to an accepted guest, the latter, in the absence of warning or notice to the contrary, has a right to assume that the furniture and appliances in the room and bath are in good condition and repair to be used by the guest in the manner and for the purposes to which such furniture and appliances are commonly put. When the defendants assigned the bath in question, the plaintiff had a right to use it as a bath with full confidence that the faucets were in good working con
As the plaintiff’s case depends upon oral testimony, the credibility of herself and her witnesses is for the fact finding body, the chancellor in this proceeding. But if the case had been before a jury, the plaintiff would have had a right to have the court charge that the happening of the accident as described by her, if believed by the jury, was sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants to justify a finding by them that the defendants were negligent and to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff for such damages as they found from the evidence that she had sustained: Tamres v. Reed, 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 28.
The bill alleges that the lodge for which the defendants were trustees “was the owner and proprietor” of the hotel; there is, however, neither allegation nor proof that the defendants or the lodge were the operators of the hotel. But the defendants have made no point of this omission. Does the plaintiff seek to charge the defendants as the owners and lessors, or as the operating owners? As there are different bases of liability in these two situations, we call attention to the matter so that upon further hearing the precise relationship between the defendants and the plaintiff may be made to appear.
And now, to wit, January 25, 1936, the plaintiff’s exception to the court’s order sustaining the defendants’ motion to dismiss the bill is sustained and a new trial granted. An exception is noted in favor of the defendants.
