172 A. 147 | Pa. | 1934
Argued March 27, 1934.
The appellants, husband and wife, sued defendant, operating a motion picture theatre in the City of Pittsburgh, to recover for injuries sustained by the wife in the theatre. The jury rendered a verdict for the defendant. The alleged negligence relied on was inadequate *21
lighting in view of the construction of the theatre at the place of the accident. The questions of negligence and contributory negligence were submitted to the jury in a charge of which no complaint is made. The assignments of error complain that the verdict is against the evidence; that a model of the theatre was rejected and a view was refused; that opinion evidence offered by the plaintiffs was rejected, and that such evidence offered by the defendant was improperly received. We all agree that there was no reversible error. The measure of care required by the operator of such a theatre has been stated in the opinion this day filed in Haugh v. Harris Brothers Amusement Co. [supra,
There was no abuse of discretion in refusing a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence: Rose v. Adelphia Hotel Co.,
Plaintiffs entered the theatre during the showing of a picture and were standing in an aisle at the rear of the theatre looking for seats. An usher told them that they could not remain where they were, and pointed out one seat near them in the last row. This last row of seats was reached from the aisle by a stairway of three steps; the next two rows of seats were reached by a ramp, or incline, about three feet long. In going to the seat in the last row, Mrs. Smith testified that she "went up that incline" *22 and "took two steps then from the incline," which placed her on the level at which the seats were. It is clear, therefore, that she stepped from the top of the incline leading to the second and third last rows of seats to the top step of the flight leading to the last row, and from there to the level on which the seats were constructed. Soon after, when other patrons left the theatre, she arose to join her husband and find seats in another part of the theatre. She says that she stepped from the seat aisle with her right foot, which would place her on the top step, and from there took a step with her left foot, thinking that she "would touch the incline that I came up on and I just dropped down and I was dazed and I didn't know where I was." She stated that she "put my other foot out to the incline and it dropped down into space." She evidently misjudged the height of the top step above the incline at the point from which, a short time before, she had stepped up. At the end seat of the second last row (and immediately in front of the seat she had occupied) was affixed a light so shaded that it illuminated the floor immediately below, that is, the tops of the incline and steps leading to the last rows of seats. There was also a light, covered with an amber shade, in the ceiling above the aisle at which plaintiffs entered.
The evidence of plaintiffs' expert, Williams, was rejected because he did not qualify to give an opinion, a good reason for rejecting it. The assignments of error to the rejection of evidence of the other expert, Ferguson, are misleading because the opinions apparently sought by the questions which he was not permitted to answer and referred to in the 5th, 6th and 7th assignments of error, were subsequently given in his evidence: Graybill v. Pullman Motor Car Co.,
There is nothing in the complaint that defendant's witness was permitted to testify that the type of lighting in the theatre was "in accord with the best known practice in [his] profession in theatre lighting"; the value of his evidence as to the use of the shaded light at the end of the second last row of seats, referred to above, was for the jury.
The judgment is affirmed.