Condran v. . Park Tilford

107 N.E. 565 | NY | 1915

The plaintiff's intestate, James Condran, for many years an employee of the defendant, Park Tilford, met his death in the defendant's store through the fall of a freight elevator. His brother, Michael, died at the same time. The defendant's liability for the death of James is the subject of this action.

The elevator ran upon wooden guide rails at the sides of the hoistway. The cables which raised it were wound about a revolving drum. On November 18, 1910, the porters were hoisting casks of wine from the basement to the fourth or top floor. The elevator ran a few inches above the floor. The man in charge tried to lower it, but it would not move. Michael Condran, the head porter, and James Condran, the receiving and shipping clerk, came to the operator's aid. Inspection showed that the cables were disarranged. They had slipped out of the groove on the drum, and had thereby become entangled. After some attempt to adjust them and dislodge the car, the men gave up the task. They decided to leave it where it stood until they could send elsewhere to have it repaired. They climbed down from the top of the car on which they had been working. James Condran took his stand on some chests of tea that were piled up on the floor beside him. Michael swung himself on the platform of the car and landed there heavily. As he did so, the car shot down the shaft. It carried Michael with it. At that moment James was leaning forward to enter the car, and he, too, fell to his death.

We think the jury could properly find that in helping to make these repairs, James Condran was not a volunteer, but was doing his duty. It is true he was known as the receiving and shipping clerk, but the evidence is that he was employed generally as a useful man about the place. He had done like work in the past with the approval of the defendant's superintendent. We think also that there was evidence from which the jury might find that the defendant had been negligent. "It was *345 not necessary that the defendant should have had notice of the particular method in which an accident would occur, if the possibility of an accident was clear to the ordinarily prudent eye." (Munsey v. Webb, 231 U.S. 150, 156.) Whenever the car ran a little above the level of the top floor, the cables were forced out of their grooves and became tangled and twisted. That is what happened on this day. The same thing had happened before. It had to happen whenever the operator did not make a perfect landing. The defendant thus knew, or at all events might have known, of the dangerous condition. We speak of it as dangerous, for we think it could be found so by a jury. The twisting of the cables held the car tight, but the appearance of safety was deceptive, for of a sudden they snapped and the car fell. The inference is not unreasonable that in being thus twisted and entangled they were subjected to a strain which they could not bear. One of them was found the next day entirely off the drum and wound around the shaft. A witness describes it as "jammed in so tight" between the shaft and the drum that it could not be pried out, but had to be cut with a chisel. The break in one cable was about ten feet from the crossbar above the car; in the other about forty feet. Owing to the manner in which they were entangled, it was to be expected that they would break at different distances. Indeed, it is not improbable, as the defendant concedes, that with one cable off the drum, a single cable had to stand the weight and strain of the car. In the absence of some other and more reasonable explanation, the jury, we think, had the right to find that the twisting and overlapping of these cables was the cause of the disaster. It does not acquit the defendant of fault to show that there was no trouble when the car was even with the floor. The chance that it would often run a few inches higher was not to be ignored. It had run higher before. It might reasonably be expected to run the same way again. Common experience *346 instructs us that this was something to be foreseen. Whether it ought to have been foreseen, whether, if seen, it portended danger, and whether, if danger resulted, the fall of the elevator was a proximate consequence, were questions for the jury. (Munsey v. Webb, supra.)

There was no error, therefore, in the refusal to dismiss the complaint. There was error, however, as we think, in the way in which the case was submitted to the jury. The learned trial judge made no attempt in his charge to state the physical conditions from which the jury would have the right to draw the inference of negligence. He left it to them in the most general terms to say whether the elevator was in order, and whether a reasonably safe place in which to work had been provided for the defendant's servants. With a charge so general, it became important that the jury should not be permitted to infer negligence from conditions not proved to have been the cause of the disaster. The defendant's counsel attempted to eliminate those conditions by appropriate requests to charge. The plaintiff in her bill of particulars had specified many defects other than the twisted cables. She had charged that a bolt or key which fitted in the drum was loose, and had repeatedly fallen out. The defendant asked the court to charge that there was no evidence to warrant a finding that the fall of the elevator was due to any such defect. The request was refused, and the refusal, we think, was error. It is true that months before a key had fallen out of the drum. But workmen made the necessary repairs, and that was the end of the trouble. This is admitted by the plaintiff's witnesses. The key, so far as the evidence shows, was intact and in place when the machinery was examined after the elevator fell. There was no proof of any present defect in the condition of the drum. There was no proof of any causal connection between the previous defect and the fall of the hoist. The jury could not say consistents, *347 with the evidence that the one event had anything to do with the happening of the other.

There was a like error in the refusal of other requests to charge. The record contains no evidence that the fall of the elevator was due to any defects in the guide rails. A screw had fallen from one of the rails between the first and second floors. Its loss, however, had nothing to do with the accident. The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury accordingly, but the request was refused. All that the plaintiff's counsel is able to say in support of that ruling is that if a screw fell out at one point, a jury might assume, even without evidence, that other screws fell out elsewhere. Many other defects relied on by the plaintiff, and not established by the proofs, were left to the consideration of the jury against the defendant's protest. There was no proof that the fall of the car was due to the play between the shoes of the car and the guide rails. The uncontradicted evidence is that the play was not unusual. There was no proof that the fall was due to any defects in the clutches. True, the clutches were clotted with dirt and oil, but it does not appear that this made them ineffective. The result of these rulings was that the jury had no adequate guidance as to the issues to be decided. They were told to say whether the defendant had been negligent. The act or omission was not defined to which negligence might be attributed.

The defendant urges that there was a like error in permitting the jury to find that the cables were defective. A witness described them as worn, but explained by this that he meant that they were glassy or shiny. He also said that after the car fell he observed that the strands of the cable had separated at the point of breakage. This supplies no proof that any defect was visible before the fall. There is, however, a sentence in the testimony of this witness in which, describing a cable as he observed it before the car fell, he speaks of it as raveled. The context *348 makes it very doubtful whether he meant anything more than that the coils of the cable had escaped from the groove, and had become twisted around the drum. We are not required on this appeal to determine the meaning that should be given to this testimony. We call attention to it now in order that on another hearing its obscurity may be corrected.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.

WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK and MILLER, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed, etc.

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