The fact that the grass-covered bank or ramp on which plaintiff was seated as she watched the baseball game was customarily or frequently used by spectators for this purpose was sufficient to impose upon the defendants a duty to exercise ordinary care for the prevention of injury to those whom it invited and who chose to sit on this bank, but we *639 think the evidence here fails to disclose negligent breach of such duty proximately causing the injury complained of by the plaintiff.
Baseball is an outdoor game. Those who operated a park appropriate for playing this game for the entertainment of spectators, as shown by the evidence in this case, would not be expected to maintain the grass-covered slopes of an embankment on which some spectators chose to sit entirely free from roughness or unevenness or slight depressions. Defendants were not insurers of the safety of those who entered their park but were only held to the obligation of exercising due care to prevent injury which reasonably could have been foreseen and to give warning of hidden perils or unsafe conditions ascertainable by reasonable inspection.
Bowden v. Kress,
Whether in any event the City of Lexington as lessor of the park, under the terms of the lease, could be held liable for negligence in causing or permitting on this bank a hole or depression, such as the plaintiff has described, need not be determined, as we think the plaintiff has failed to make out a case of actionable negligence.
The judgment of nonsuit is
Affirmed.
