
    Mayme Mitcheltree, Respondent, v. Edward D. Stair and A. L. Wilbur, Copartners in Business under the Firm Name of Stair & Wilbur, Appellants, Impleaded with Pabst Brewing Company and Others, Defendants.
    First Department,
    December 30, 1909.
    Negligence—fall on slippery staircase—when lessee of theater not ■ liable to performer — assumption of risk.
    A sub-lessee and manager of a theater is not chargeable with negligence in allowing the steps of an iron stairway leading to the dressing rooms for actors to become worn and slippery so that a performer who had used the stairway many times fell and was injured.
    Especially is this so where the person injured was not an employee of the theater manager, for as lessee and .manager he was not obliged to furnish a reasonably safe place to work, but only to use reasonable care in keeping, the building in repair.
    As the plaintiff used the stairway many limes, knowing its condition, she assumed the risk.
    Appeal by the defendants, Edward D. Stair and another,- copartners, etc., from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office' of the cleric of the county, of New York on the 13th day of January, 1909, upon the verdict of a jury for $5,000, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 14th day-of January, 1909, denying the said defendants’ motion for a new. trial made upon the minutes. e
    
    
      
      John Vernou Bouvier, Jr., for the appellants.
    
      Terence J. McManus, for the respondent.
   McLaughlin, J.:

On the 2d of December, 1903, the plaintiff was a member of a theatrical company giving performances at a theater in the city of Hew York, of which the appellants were the sub-lessees and managers. The dressing room which the plaintiff used was in the basement and was reached from the stage by means of an iron stairway which extended from one side of the stage down about eight steps to a landing, against the wall of the building, and then down from the landing at right angles -about eight steps more. On the afternoon of the day in question a performance was given. After the close of the first act the plaintiff started, to go down these steps to the dressing room to change her costume for the second act, and in doing so she slipped on the first or second step and fell to the landing below, sustaining very serious injuries. This action was brought to recover the damages sustained on the ground that the same were caused by the negligence of the appellants in that they had failed to provide proper lights for the stairway, and also in that they had permitted the steps or treads, which were of perforated' iron, to become smooth and slippery. The plaintiff had a verdict of $5,000, and from the judgment entered thereon and an order denying a motion for a new trial, this appeal is taken.

At the trial some evidence was introduced to the effect that the stairway was insufficiently lighted, but no proof whatever was offered to the effect that this was the cause of of contributed to the accident, the proof conclusively establishing that it was due to the smooth and slippery condition of the steps. The stairway was used by a large number of people, at each performance, and there is sufficient evidence that the perforated iron steps or treads had been worn smooth and were slippery, especially on the edges. The plaintiff testified she had to go up and down the stairway at least twelve times during- each performance and the company had given eight performances a week at the- theater from the previous October thirteenth to the time the accident occurred, and it appeared that at least one other person had slipped and fallen on the stairway during that time.

I am unable to distinguish this case from that of Kline v. Abraham (178 N. Y. 377). There the defendants had constructed in their store a marble stairway, the steps of which by reason of use had become smooth and slippery. ■ Plaintiff, one of their employees,who had been accustomed to go up and down the stairs twice each day, slipped, fell and was injured. She fell because of the slippery condition of the steps on which other persons had, prior thereto, also slipped. She had a recovery, which was affirmed by the Appellate Division (80 App. Div. 641), but on appeal the judg' ment was reversed and a new trial granted. Judge Haight, who delivered the opinion, in which the other members of the court concurred, said : “ Marble, in the construction of public buildings, large fireproof hotels and stores upon the floors and stairways, has been in common use for many years. The surface is smooth and a person walking thereon is required to use care to avoid slipping. The same is equally true with reference to floors and stairs constructed of hardwood, especially where the surface has been polished as in the case of many of our more expensive private residences, but heretofore the construction of such floors of stairways has not been considered to be dangerous, unlawful or a nuisance. It has not been generally understood that a master, charged with the duty of furnishing a safe place for his servant to work, failed in his obligation by reason of his having supplied marble stairs. In this case, as we have seen, the plaintiff was perfectly familiar with these stairs^ She had been up and down the staircase at. least twice daily and must have known of its condition. It was an open, visible structure, having nó latent, hidden or unseen defects. - It is not pretended that there Was any foreign substance upon the steps to make them more slippery. . If they- weré slippery by reason of their smoothness or polish, that fact was as apparent- to her as it ivas to her employers ; she knew that the steps were not covered with rubber treads, carpets or other material, and we think the risk incidental to their use was assumed by her.”

It certainly cannot be claimed that an iron stairway is any more inherently dangerous than a stairway of marble, and if the plaintiff in the caso' cited could not recover, I do not see how this one can. Here, the plaintiff was .not an employee of the appellants and their duty was simply to keep the building in reasonable repair: In the Kline ca'se the court held that the defendants had not failed in their duty to furnish the plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work by reason of having supplied marble stairs, which were smooth and had been worn slippery by use, and for the same reason it cannot be said that the appellants here had failed in their duty to keep the building in repair by reason of the fact that the iron steps had become smooth or slippery by use.

But it is- suggested that the Kline case was decided upon the ground that the plaintiff had there’assumed the risk. In the present case, however, the plaintiff had been using the stairs for several weeks, during which time she had gone up and down them several hundred times. She must, therefore, have known of the condition of the stairs and assumed whatever risk there-was attendant upon their use. The situation is even less favorable to her than it was to the plaintiff in the Kline ease, because here the appellants were under no obligation to furnish her with a reasonably safe place to work, but only to use reasonable' care in keeping the building — including the stairway — in repair.

The judgment and order appealed from- must, therefore, he reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide event.

Ingraham-, Clarke, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.

Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.  