46 A.2d 506 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1946
Argued March 4, 1946. Plaintiff, a coal trucker, was injured while on the premises of defendant for the purpose of receiving a *36 load of coal. He brought this action of trespass and recovered a verdict which the court below refused to set aside. From the refusal of its motion for judgment n.o.v. defendant has brought this appeal.
In disposing of an appeal from the refusal of a motion for judgment n.o.v. it is incumbent on us to consider the evidence in the light most advantageous to appellee resolving every conflict in his favor and giving him the benefit of every fact and inference of fact, and rejecting all other facts and inferences of fact excepting only incontrovertible physical facts. Reviewing the testimony in that light, plaintiff had driven his truck into a building, open at both ends, owned and operated by defendant and described as a washery or breaker. He stopped the truck under a coal chute or pocket indicated by the loader, an employee of defendant, for the purpose of having it loaded with coal. The coal is loaded into the trucks from the chute in a conical heap and it is necessary for the truckers to level it off. For that purpose shovels are kept on a platform known as the loading platform, about three feet in width running the length of the building and about seven or eight feet from the ground. Two electric fans were installed 5 1/2 feet above the platform. Each fan had four twelve-inch blades. They were entirely open at the back through which air was sucked in and blown out in front through radiators, similar to automobile radiators, in order to keep the wet coal in the pockets from freezing. The fans had been in operation for some time prior to the date of the accident, to wit, December 6, 1941.
Plaintiff, in walking along the platform looking for a shovel, had to pass underneath the fans. As he was 5 feet 10 1/2 inches in height and the fans were only 5 1/2 feet above the platform, it was necessary for him to stoop or bend over when passing beneath them. While in that position he felt his hat being drawn from his head by the suction from one of the fans and instinctively reached for his hat to keep it from being blown away. *37 In so doing, his left hand came in contact with the fan with the result that it was seriously and permanently injured.
While readily conceding that plaintiff was a business visitor to whom it owed an affirmative duty to keep its premises in a reasonably safe condition or to warn him of any dangerous condition which it knew or should have known existed (Vetter v.Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co.,
In our opinion that argument is without merit. The best answer to it is found in the testimony of plaintiff's witnesses and the admission from the witness stand by one of defendant's employees that it was usual and customary for truck drivers to step up onto the loading platform to get the shovels that were customarily kept there and were used by them in leveling off the coal after it had been dumped into the trucks from the chutes. This testimony clearly establishes that business visitors customarily used the platform for the purpose of the invitation and that its usage brought them in close proximity to the fans.
What then was the duty of the appellant with respect to the fans? It contends that: "There is not the slightest suggestion [in the Act of May 2, 1905, P.L. 352, repealed and supplied by the Act of May 18, 1937, P.L. 654,
The judgment is affirmed.