WALT DISNEY WORLD CO., Etc., et al., Appellants,
v.
Marietta GOODE, Etc., et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*623 John L. O'Donnell, Jr., and Thomas B. DeWolf of DeWolf, Ward & Morris, P.A., Orlando, for appellants.
Joel D. Eaton of Podhurst, Orseck, Parks, Josefsberg, Eaton, Meadow & Olin, P.A., and Freidin & Hirsch, P.A., Miami, for appellees.
ORFINGER, Judge.
On August 11, 1977, four year old Joel Goode drowned in a man-made waterway or moat at Walt Disney World. He was with his mother, Marietta Goode, who noticed that he was missing shortly after 11 P.M. Approximately three hours later, Joel's body was found in five feet of water a short distance from where he had become separated from his mother. An autopsy found no evidence of foul play and established the cause of death as drowning. No one saw Joel enter the waterway.
Joel's parents sued Walt Disney World for the wrongful death of their son. The jury returned a verdict of $1,000,000 for Joel's father, Harry Goode, and $1,000,000 for Joel's mother, Marietta. The jury also determined that Disney and Joel's mother were each fifty percent negligent. Accordingly, a judgment was entered for $500,000 dollars for the mother and $1,000,000 for the father. On appeal, Disney argues that the artificial waterway was not unreasonably dangerous nor did it constitute a trap, and thus as a matter of law, Disney was not negligent. Even assuming some negligence on its part, Disney contends that the damages awarded were excessive.
Walt Disney World is a place of public amusement, where thousands of adults and children are entertained daily for the price of admission. Joel Goode was a paying patron and thus a business invitee on the premises. The accident occurred at night, when crowds were forming to watch the 11:30 P.M. Main Street "Electric Light Parade." The legal principles which should be applied in this case are exactly the same as those which would be applied had Joel Goode fallen at night into an open hole dug by Disney employees on one of its walkways and left without barricades, lights or other warning, or in cases where a plaintiff drives his motor vehicle off an unbarricaded dead end street into a bay or canal. See e.g. City of Tampa v. Finley,
There is no evidence in this case that Joel Goode entered the waterway to swim or bathe. Instead, the evidence lends itself to the conclusion that he fell in. Joel Goode did not become a trespasser by falling into the moat. Disney employees testified that they were aware of the fact that young children frequently climbed the short fences to play in the grassy area adjacent to the moat. As we pointed out in Goode v. Walt Disney World Co.,
Whether or not Disney is liable for the drowning of the infant decedent turns on the ordinary rules of negligence as they apply to a business invitee at a place of public amusement. The duty owed to a business invitee by the operator of a place of public amusement was said in Wells v. Palm Beach Kennel Club,
Places of amusement where large crowds congregate are required to keep their premises in reasonably safe condition *624 commensurate with the business conducted. If the owner fails in this, and such failure is the proximate result of injury to one lawfully on the premises, compensatory damages may be recovered if the one injured is not at fault. J.G. Christopher Co. v. Russell,63 Fla. 191 ,58 So. 45 , text 47, Ann.Cas. 1913C, 564. One operating a place of amusement like a race course where others are invited is charged with a continuous duty to look after the safety of his patrons... .
We do not mean to imply that they are insurers of the safety of their patrons, but we do say that reasonable care as applied to a race track requires a higher degree of diligence than it does when applied to a store, bank or such like place of business. [Emphasis added].
Id.
The attractive nuisance doctrine, relied upon by the dissent, is an exception to the rule of nonliability for injury to infant trespassers. Johnson v. Wood,
[T]he child killed in this case was not a trespasser, so there is no need to search for a doctrine separate from the rules of ordinary negligence law to support a duty of care toward her.
Id. at 265.
The rule relied upon by the dissent, going to artificial ponds and the liability of owners thereof, had its inception (and has its continued application) in attractive nuisance cases. See Allen v. William P. McDonald Corp.,
Sub judice a major contention at trial was that Disney was negligent in not taking the precautions necessary to keep the child from falling into the water. The plaintiffs presented evidence from which the jury could conclude that, among other things, Disney was negligent in the following respects: (1) failing to provide barrier fences of adequate height to prevent access by small children to the otherwise unprotected moat; (2) designing and constructing the land areas adjacent to the moat with an unreasonably steep slope, creating a rolling or falling hazard to small children; (3) designing and constructing the moat to contain water of an unreasonable depth constituting a drowning hazard to small children; and (4) failing to provide an adequate warning to parents of the potential danger. Both the manager of safety and occupation and the manager of loss prevention for Disney testified that the fences around the grassy area adjacent to the moat were not designed to keep children out of the moat but rather were designed for crowd control and to keep people off the grass. The fences separating the walkway from the grassy slopes to the moat were approved at a height of 31 inches, with a 24 inch "stepping distance" between the bottom and top horizontal rails. Disney's own standards required a fence with a minimum 36 inch stepping distance anywhere there was an interface with a water hazard. There was no fence or other barrier directly adjacent to the moat itself. There was evidence presented from which the jury could conclude that a fence with a 36 inch stepping distance would have effectively prevented children of Joel Goode's age from climbing over it, whereas the lower fence could be easily scaled by such children. The Disney employee who designed the fences in question testified that the short fence was not intended as a safety barrier for the moat nor was it adequate for that purpose.
Disney employees testified that they frequently observed children going over the fences into the grassy area surrounding the moat. Additionally, the moat was built to a depth of 5 feet and it was undisputed that the depth of a similar moat at Disneyland (in California) was only between 1 1/2 to 3 feet deep. Regarding the foreseeability of the accident, Disney's supervisor for guest relations testified that in the twelve months preceeding the accident 11,420 children were reported lost at Disney, although in her four years of experience none had been found harmed or injured. Disney had instituted elaborate procedures for reuniting separated children and parents. From the testimony presented there was evidence from which a jury could determine that Disney had failed in its duty to keep and maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition commensurate with the business conducted. Therefore this case involves facts and a rule of law much like those in Mertz v. Krueger,
If there was ever a place where one would not be expected to be on the lookout for pitfalls, booby traps or other dangers, this would seem to be the one.
* * * * * *
The courts over the country are committed to the doctrine that whether or not defendants exercised ordinary care to protect their patrons in cases like this is a question for the jury under appropriate instructions. Wells, et ux v. Palm Beach Kennel Club,160 Fla. 502 ,35 So.2d 720 .
Id. at 162.
Whether Disney breached its duty of reasonable care to the decedent by leaving the moat unprotected under the circumstances presented here was a factual question to be determined by the jury. It is peculiarly a jury function to determine what precautions are reasonably required in the exercise of a particular duty of due care. Orlando Executive Park v. P.D.R.,
Disney also argues that the $1,000,000 damages awarded to each of Joel's parents for past and future pain and suffering caused by the loss of their son was excessive as a matter of law. In determining this point on appeal, we are guided by the supreme court's statement in Bould v. Touchette,
In tort cases, damages are to be measured by the jury's discretion. The court should never declare a verdict excessive merely because it is above the amount which the court itself considers the jury should have allowed. The verdict should not be disturbed unless it is so inordinately large as obviously to exceed the maximum limit of a reasonable range within which the jury may properly operate. [citations omitted].
Id. at 1184, 1185. See also Wackenhut Corp. v. Canty,
Those who have not brought a child into the world and loved it and planned for it, and then have it suddenly snatched away from them and killed can hardly have an adequate idea of the mental pain and anguish that one undergoes from such a tragedy. No other affliction so tortures and wears down the physical and nervous system. Psychosymatic illness of a serious nature may follow. The emotions may be unstrung, the nerves put on edge, and the end effect may be a period in a rest home, a mental hospital, serious physical derangement and sometimes death. Damage for mental pain and suffering is one of the late developments in the law and its potentialities are not restricted as they formerly were because so much has been learned of the evil consequences that flow from mental injury.
Id. at 636, 637.
We are unable to say, as a matter of law, that the award was so inordinately large as to exceed the maximum limit of the reasonable range within which the jury could properly operate. There was unrebutted evidence before the trial court that the Goodes suffered almost complete, full personality changes since the loss of Joel and that their grief was overwhelming, genuine and crushing. The jury saw the parents and heard their testimony, and were in a better position to evaluate the reality of their anguish and suffering than are we from a reading of a cold record. We *627 should not substitute our judgment for theirs. Judgment for plaintiffs is hereby
AFFIRMED.
DAUKSCH, J., concurs.
COBB, J., dissents with opinion.
COBB, Judge, dissenting:
The majority opinion has ignored the true issue in this case: What is the duty owed to children by the owner of premises with a waterway[1] located thereon? The owner of such premises, at least until now, has not been held to the duty of an insurer of the safety of visitors to those premises, whether they were invitees or trespassers. See Brightwell v. Beem,
The premises cases relied upon by the majority concern business invitees and, without exception, relate to persons who were injured at locations within the express scope of their invitations. See, e.g., Green Springs, Inc. v. Calvera,
The general rule is that whether a water hazard is artificial or natural is irrelevant to the issue of liability, especially where the manmade body of water merely duplicates the natural state and is no more deceptive than a natural body of water. See Howard v. Atlantic Coastline Railroad Co.,
The rule supported by the decided weight of the authority is that the owner of artificial lakes, fish ponds, mill ponds, gin ponds and other pools, streams and bodies of water is not guilty of actionable negligence on account of drownings therein unless they are constructed so as to constitute a trap or raft or unless there is some unusual element of danger lurking about them not existent in ponds generally. [Citations omitted].
*628
The trial record, however, does not sustain these claims. First, as contended by the defense, the duty to build any fence preventing access to the moat is dependent upon proof that the moat itself constitutes a trap or unusual element of danger not common to ponds generally. Disney concedes that the fence between the area where Joel Goode was last seen and the moat was not a barrier fence, but merely a crowd control fence designed to keep patrons off the grass.[2] The evidence indicates that the drowning of Joel Goode occurred at a location which cannot be characterized as a trap or as having an unusual element of danger. The grassy approach to the water where the body was found is comparatively flat[3] and there is no sudden drop off.[4]
More importantly, the plaintiffs stipulated at trial that no evidence would be introduced that the sides of the waterway were so steep or so slippery as to cause any difficulty for anyone (which would include four-year-olds) to get out of the water. The stipulation apparently was entered, as shown by the record and acknowledged by counsel at oral argument, to prevent introduction by Disney on rebuttal of a videotape showing small children easily traversing the shallow edges of the moat, which gradually sloped out to a depth of five feet some seven to eight feet from shore. The stipulation was modified during trial to allow testimony that a child who could not swim and was already out in the water at a depth over his head would have difficulty getting out of the moat. This, of course, is axiomatic, and obvious to anyone with common sense. It does not reach the issue of the existence vel non of a trap.
In essence, the plaintiffs, for strategic trial purposes, stipulated away the very fact that it was essential for them to establish i.e., that Joel Goode entered the water and could not get out because of a trap or an unusual element of danger. If there was no such trap or unusual element of danger, as alleged, then the height of the fence, the slope of the grass, the condition of the sides of the moat, the depth of the water, and the failure to warn parents[5] become legally irrelevant.
*629 The case of Hendershot v. Kapok Tree Inn, Inc.,
In the instant case, the evidence simply does not support a finding that the waterway wherein the minor victim drowned was constructed so as to be more dangerous than ponds and bodies of water generally. Indeed, millions of children previously traversed the Disney premises without injury from this waterway. Under these circumstances, the law does not presume to protect individuals from their own fault, bad luck, improvidence or misfortune. "Legal remedies," as Justice Terrell observed in Newby, "should not be confused with Good Samaritan impulses."
I would reverse.
NOTES
[1] Lomas v. West Palm Beach Water Co.,
Notes
[1] Although the waterway herein is often referred to as a "moat," it is simply a picturesque canal that encircles Cinderella's castle in the heart of the Magic Kingdom and is used for swan boat rides. It is in no way analogous to a true medieval moat with steep sides designed to prevent access by invaders.
[2] The majority opinion states: "Disney's own standards required a fence with a minimum thirty-six inch stepping distance anywhere there was an interface with a water hazard." The majority fails to mention that this standard was for bridges and docks extending over the deeper water; there is no evidence that these fences were inadequate or that Joel fell into the water from a bridge or dock.
[3] There was testimony by one Cortland Collier, called by the plaintiffs as an "expert," as to the danger to children of a steep grassy slope adjacent to the waterway at a different location than that where the body was found. It was conceded at oral argument that there was no evidence or contention the accident occurred at that location. Moreover, the acceptance of Collier as an expert qualified to give opinion testimony on water safety was error. The trial court had rejected him as such at a prior trial of this cause, and initially at this trial. As a civil engineer, Collier had once assisted in drafting a proposed swimming pool ordinance for a municipality, but had no other apparent qualifications as a water safety expert.
[4] In Hendershot, a sudden drop off of three feet approximately two feet out from the shoreline was held to be insufficient to impose liability on the landowner.
[5] In point of law, there is no case authority anywhere, prior to the instant case, that implies a duty on the part of the owner of premises to warn parents of young children that the latter may drown in water over their heads. That is an obvious danger parents are responsible to know. See, e.g., Perotta v. Tri-State Insurance Co.,
[6] Interestingly enough, Disney has not challenged the trial court's failure to commensurately reduce the father's award by the same 50% reduction applied to the mother's award because of her negligence. While this result is proper according to Singletary v. National Railroad Passenger Corp.,
