299 Mass. 20 | Mass. | 1937
The plaintiff has a verdict against the defendant in an action of tort for the alleged negligence of one of the defendant’s employees. The only exception presented is that of the defendant to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict.
The jury could have found that the plaintiff was injured in the defendant’s roller skating rink to which she had been admitted by a ticket which she purchased; that as she was skating, the guard or attendant, skating backwards in the same direction in which the plaintiff was going, overtook and passed another skater, who was about five feet behind the plaintiff, and bumped into the plaintiff causing her to fall; that the instructions of the defendant to the guards were to skate at one half to one third of the speed of the skaters and in skating backwards to face the patrons, and in general to regulate the speed of the patrons; that on the face of the plaintiff’s admission ticket appeared: “In purchasing this ticket you agree to use same at your own risk. (over)”; that on the reverse side of the ticket appeared: “The Management will not be responsible for any accident or liability whatever while on their premises. In purchasing this ticket you agree to use same at your own risk”; that the plaintiff noticed signs in the place that said “skaters, something about their own risk”; that she did not see the ticket or bother to read it when she purchased it; that she did not know anything was on the back of it; that the ticket was purchased from a man in a cage and then given to a man at the door within a few feet of where it was purchased; and that the plaintiff had previously skated in the rink. There is nothing in the record to show when the plaintiff noticed the signs in the rink which, as she testified, said “skaters, something about their own risk.” We do not take into account other testimony which the jury may not have believed. The jury .was not required to accept the plaintiff’s version of everything that occurred where, as here, there was other evidence which warranted different conclusions. Whiteacre v. Boston Elevated Railway, 241 Mass. 163.
It could not have been ruled as matter of law that there
Exceptions overruled.