356 Mass. 569 | Mass. | 1970
This is an action of tort in three counts for personal injuries received by the plaintiffs as the result of an assault which occurred while they were leaving the defendant corporation’s bowling alley. At the close of the evidence at a trial before a jury, the judge allowed the defendant’s motion for directed verdicts. The case is here upon the plaintiffs’ exceptions to that action.
We summarize the evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs. Cain v. Southern Mass. Tel. Co. 219 Mass. 504.
The boys in the canteen area then began to take empty soft drink bottles from a disposal rack and leave the build
We agree with the defendant’s assertion that the law does
There were numerous subsidiary questions of fact which, it seems to us, the jury should have been given an opportunity to consider. Among these were: the place of origin of, and the persons chargeable with, the provocative and annoying conduct and its duration; whether the manager of the defendant had knowledge of it either by personal observation or complaints to him; whether the carrying off of empty bottles by the young men from the premises would, in the circumstances, convey to a reasonable person the ominous threat of impending physical violence to his patrons either on the premises or in the immediate vicinity; whether requests for police protection had been made to the manager, and, if made, whether in the circumstances then known to him or of which he ought to have been aware, those requests should have been heeded. The resolution of these and kindred questions was for the jury, and upon their resolution would depend the determination of the ultimate factual issue: whether the defendant’s manager knew or reasonably should have known that the safety of the plaintiffs was endangered by other persons on the premises at a time when he could have taken protective measures to minimize or avert the danger to the plaintiffs, and failed seasonably to take the measures with the result that the plaintiffs were assaulted.
The credibility of the plaintiffs doubtless was affected by inconsistent statements made by them on cross-examination or in answers to interrogatories, or in testimony at a prior criminal trial. The extent to which their credibility was
The defendant does not squarely argue, and we think rightly, that it is relieved of liability merely because some especially violent conduct occurred outside its premises. The evidence warranted, but did not require, a finding that the affray was a continuing one which began on the premises and spilled over to the street, accompanied by an indication that the young men were bent on further violence against the plaintiffs. It did not require a finding that the “street fight” was a separate, independent combat, deliberately resolved upon and carried out by the young men without the knowledge or awareness of the defendant’s agents of their purpose.
Although the sale or use of intoxicating liquors has incidentally been a factor in many of the cases of this type which have recently come before us, neither is, in principle or in law, as the defendant appears to argue, an indispensable ingredient of the plaintiff’s case. Compare Rawson v. Massachusetts Operating Co. Inc. 328 Mass. 558, with McFadden v. Bancroft Hotel Corp. 313 Mass. 56, Quigley v. Wilson Line of Mass. Inc. 338 Mass. 125, Kane v. Fields Corner Grille, Inc. 341 Mass. 640, and Carey v. New Yorker of Worcester, Inc. 355 Mass. 450.
Exceptions sustained.