303 N.Y. 116 | NY | 1951
By this action the plaintiff, Sadie Philpot, seeks recovery for personal injuries sustained on May 30, 1946, when she was struck by the sharp edge of a broken glass bottle while she and her husband were attending a baseball game at Ebbets Field, a ball park in Brooklyn. The coplaintiff demands reimbursement for expense incurred for the care and treatment of his wife and for loss of her services. As recovery by the husband depends upon the success of his wife’s cause of action, reference will be made only to her suit.
The evidence comprising plaintiff’s case came into the record by means of procedure which we do not commend and which we are willing to consider only because it was adopted on the trial with the consent of all parties concerned. (Rules Civ. Prac., rule 4; see, also, Clason v. Baldwin, 152 N. Y. 204, 211; Stemmler v. Mayor of City of New York, 179 N. Y. 473, 482; Pines v. Beck, 300 N. Y. 181, 187.)
Although a jury had been impaneled the record of proof up to the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence included no testimony by witnesses but comprised "the following concessions, among others, by the defendants that if witnesses were called in support of plaintiff’s case they would testify: That at eleven o ’clock on the morning of May 30, 1946, the plaintiff as a patron of the defendant Brooklyn National League Baseball Club, Inc., — hereinafter referred to as the Baseball Club — occupied a spectator’s seat in a section of the lower stands at Ebbets Field, for which seat she had paid an admission fee; that the upper tier of seats above her slanted downward in such a manner that “ the edge of it was just a little behind the seat where she was seated ’ ’; that at about 1:30 in the afternoon — during the first inning of the game then in progress — a broken glass bottle either rolled, dropped or was thrown down from above and struck the plaintiff on the right arm causing a laceration which required fourteen sutures for closure; that at the time of plaintiff’s injuries the defendant Baseball Club owned and operated Ebbets Field and the codefendant Harry M. Stevens, Inc.— under a concession contract with the Baseball Club — was the only concessionaire permitted to sell bottled beverages
Upon the record which we now review the Appellate Division ruled that “ The evidence adduced was insufficient to establish negligence on the part of respondents, or either of them, which was a proximate cause of the accident and the resulting-injuries ” (277 App. Div. 1135). Disagreeing, as we do, with
True it is that the vigilance by which is measured the duty of the defendant Baseball Club to its patrons at Ebbets Field may vary in accord with the risk each patron assumes. Thus our problem, would be different had the plaintiff, after payment of the required admission fee, been injured by a ball in flight while she occupied an unscreened seat of her own choice where she accepted the danger which inheres in baseball — the chance of contact with the ball. (See Murphy v. Steeplechase Amusement Co., 250 N. Y. 479, 482.) Here, however, the injuries which befell the plaintiff were not from dangers inherent in baseball as a game but are alleged to be from lack of care by the defendants to protect the plaintiff as a spectator from risk of injuries reasonably to be foreseen.
Upon this record we cannot say as a matter of law that the means adopted by the defendant Baseball Club were sufficient to protect the plaintiff as a spectator at Ebbets Field from risk of bodily harm reasonably to be foreseen from the misuse or mishandling of empty glass beverage bottles. Nor can we say, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff as a spectator assumed the risk of being struck by a falling glass bottle. Those questions were factual and were for determination by a jury.
As to the defendant concessionaire, Harry M. Stevens, Inc., we conclude that the evidence adduced by the plaintiff was not sufficient to establish prima facie actionable negligence. The complaint alleges that both defendants ££ in consideration of the payment of admission ” failed to control, operate, maintain and supervise the ball park in a reasonably safe condition. As the record contains no evidence to support those allegations as to the concessionaire Stevens — which neither owned nor controlled Ebbets Field, nor was responsible for collecting spectators for profit — rwe find no proof of breach of duty owing to the plaintiff by that defendant. Accordingly the complaint
As to the defendant Brooklyn National League Baseball Club, Inc., the judgments should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. As to the defendant Harry M. Stevens, Inc., the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Loughran, Ch. J., Conway, Desmond, Dye, Fuld and Froessel, JJ., concur.
As to defendant Brooklyn National League Baseball Club, Inc.: Judgments reversed, etc.
As to defendant Harry M. Stevens, Inc.: Judgment affirmed.