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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ritchie v Scottish Cinema & Variety Theatres Ltd [1929] ScotCS CSIH_2 (19 February 1929) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1929/1929_SC_350.html Cite as: [1929] ScotCS CSIH_2, 1929 SLT 323, 1929 SC 350 |
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19 February 1929
Scottish Cinema and Variety Theatres |
v. |
Ritchie. |
By section 251 of the Greenock Corporation Act of 1909 it is enacted that “no theatre music hall or circus … shall be built to accommodate more than 1000 persons unless on three sides at least it is distant fifteen feet from the nearest building and is provided with sufficient exits giving direct access to at least two public streets.” The plans which were submitted to the Dean of Guild did not conform to the provisions of that section. They showed a building which was intended to accommodate 1700 persons, but which was not—on three sides of it—distant fifteen feet from the nearest building, and was not provided with exits giving access to at least two public streets. Objections were lodged by an adjoining proprietor, who complained that the building as altered and erected would infringe section 251. No exception has been taken to the locus standi of the neighbour to object. The applicants pointed out to us, with truth, that the pre-existing building also infringed section 251; but that circumstance is hardly a relevant consideration to adduce in defence of a further infringement of the section, assuming the section to apply.
The Dean of Guild has overruled the objection, and the question for our decision is whether the building referred to in the application is a “theatre” within the meaning of section 251. Nobody suggests that it is either a “music hall” or a “circus.” It will be observed that these three classes of building are referred to in the section as representing three well-known and self-contained classes. No general words are added to bring in buildings ejusdem generis with theatres, music halls, and circuses. We are thus thrown back on the proper meaning of the word. Moreover, the section is one which is restrictive of liberty in the administration of property; and, while it must be rigorously applied as an enactment in the interest of public safety, its restrictive effect ought not to be extended beyond its terms.
[His Lordship then gave the description of the proposed building, quoted above, and continued]—A “theatre” is properly a place in which spectacles of action—dramas in short—are publicly exhibited; but it cannot be disputed that the word has for long been applied to houses used for ballets and variety entertainments in which the display is dramatic only in an illegitimate sense. There is undeniable force in the objector's contention that the projection on a screen of moving photographic films is really a spectacle of action—a drama in fact—just as much as a stage play performed by living actors and actresses. A film is, indeed, precisely an instrument for producing, or rather reproducing, the action of a stage play; and it is not for the first time in the history of civilised society that the supporters of legitimate drama are heard to complain:—
jam migravit ab aure voluptas
Omnis ad incertos oculos et gaudia vana.
What is more to the point—I think the word “theatre” has recently begun to be widely applied to places in which films are shown. A glance at the directory of any modern city will provide evidence of this.
The Act we are construing was passed in 1909; and, whatever might be said regarding the connotation of the word “theatre” in an Act passed twenty years later, I think we must interpret the word with regard to its meaning in ordinary language at the date of the passing of the Greenock Act. It so happens that the Greenock Act was passed in the same year as the Cinematograph Act, 1909, and it is worth noting that the word “theatre” is never employed in that Act in reference to a place devoted to the exhibition of films. Using, as best I can, such general knowledge as is available to me, I do not think that, twenty years ago, the word “theatre” was in ordinary use to designate what was then being introduced to the public as a “cinema,” and came later to be called a “picture-house.” It included, I think, at that time a place of “variety” entertainment, although—curiously enough—such places were, both before and after, often designated “music halls” or “halls,” in order to distinguish them from “theatres” properly so called. But, if I am right in my interpretation of the word “theatre” as ordinarily used in 1909, it should, I think, follow that section 251 of the Greenock Act must be construed accordingly, and that the Dean of Guild was right in refusing to hold it as applying to the applicants' picture-house.
I am of opinion that the interlocutor of the Dean of Guild is right and should be affirmed.
The permission for BAILII to publish the text of this judgment
was granted by Scottish Council of Law Reporting and
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