182 A.D. 783 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
The defendant conducts a bathing establishment in the city of New York, wherein what are commonly known' as “ Turkish ” baths are provided for the public for a compensation. On April 13, 1916, the plaintiff entered the defendant’s premises, prepared himself for the bath and was directed to the hot room which he entered, and according to his
For the defendant, medical testimony was produced to establish that the plaintiff was suffering from organic heart disease?; that his blood pressure was excessive; and that the partial paralysis which plaintiff claimed to exist in his left arm as a consequence of the accident was in fact due to the breaking of a small blood vessel in the brain. It was also testified that a person with an excessive blood pressure and a heart lesion, spending ten to fifteen minutes in the hot room of a Turkish bath, was risking his life in so doing.
The case was submitted to the jury on two theories of negligence: First, that plaintiff was entitled to reasonable protection and reasonably sufficient attendance and attention from the defendant, such as a person of ordinary prudence engaged in such a business would supply for a patron; second, that the floor of the hot room was not sufficiently covered and that it was negligent not to have the whole floor thereof protected by carpets or rugs. There is no testimony in this record which would justify a recovery upon either theory. Plaintiff was an experienced bather. He asked for no instructions as to what he should do when he entered the defendant’s baths and gave no exterior indication of illness, nor of a physical condition which might render his use of the baths dangerous. He himself did not imagine that he was taking any risk in following out his usual course of making use of the facilities of the bath nor did he believe that his physical condition was such as to render its use dangerous. It is difficult to see on what theory the defendant could be bound to anticipate a condition which plaintiff himself did not believe possible and to surmise that he needed special attention or protection. The testimony as to how long he remained in the hot room is of the vaguest and most indefinite kind, and there is no proof that the bather in the next room who called
In addition to the two grounds of negligence assigned upon the trial plaintiff now claims that the defendant was liable for its failure to supply plaintiff with medical attendance
The judgment and order appealed from should, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and the complaint herein dismissed, with costs. The findings that the defendant was guilty of negligence and that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence are reversed.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.