219 P. 236 | Mont. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, while in the course of his employment fell into an elevator shaft in defendant’s store. Charging the accident to have been the result of defendant’s negligence, plaintiff brought this suit. There was a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, upon which judgment was entered. Motion for a new trial having been denied, defendant appealed. The transcript embraces 314 printed pages, while the “briefs” contain 226. There are forty-six specifications of error. Were we to discuss them all, this opinion might rival one of the briefs in length. But as we view the case an extended discussion will not be useful to anyone.
Asserting that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, defendant first challenged it by demurrer which was overruled. Attack upon the same ground was renewed frequently during the trial and is made the basis of many alleged errors urged upon this appeal. The complaint charges in part that at all times men
In a succeeding paragraph the foregoing conditions and others were charged specifically as negligence on the part of the defendant; for instance, it was charged that defendant negligently and carelessly failed and omitted to provide any light in or about the elevator or the shaft, but negligently kept the same and the surroundings dark; that he negligently failed and omitted to provide any appliance in or about the opening of the door leading to the shaft so as to prevent one from falling therein or to give one warning thereof; that he negligently and carelessly failed and omitted to provide any lock or other appliance on the elevator “so as to prevent the same from gradually slipping and creeping up above the floor when and where stopped, so as to prevent persons from falling in said shaft while and when the bottom of the cage would so get above the floor where stopped.”
It was then alleged that as a direct and proximate result of these acts of negligence the plaintiff, while in the exercise of due care, and while acting within the scope of his authority and in the line of his employment, and while working on the ground floor in the northeast corner thereof, fell into “said dark and unguarded opening down into said ele
The defendant insists that the complaint is fatally defective for the reason that it does not show any causal connection between any alleged act of defendant and the injuries sustained by plaintiff. In other words, the precise attack the defendant makes in this respect is that it is not alleged specifically that the aperture between the ground floor and the bottom of the elevator at the time the accident occurred was caused by any particular negligence of defendant.
The complaint was sufficient' against a general demurrer. It appears from its allegations that the defendant was negligent, that plaintiff was injured, and that the negligence charged was a proximate cause of the injury. No other reasonable inference can be drawn from the allegations of the complaint but that the injury suffered would not have happened but for the negligence alleged, and hence the causal connection between the two appears. In other words, it is reasonably clear from the allegations that if the cause had not existed the injury would not have occurred. (Stones v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 59 Mont 342, 197 Pac. 252, and cases cited.) The pleading here comes within the rule laid down in Stricklin v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 59 Mont. 367, 197 Pac. 839, wherein the court said: “It is the rule of pleading announced by our Code that the facts constituting plaintiff’s cause of action must be set forth ‘in ordinary ana concise language.’ (Rev. Codes, sec. 6532.) The rule requires the facts to be stated by direct averment so that the party who is to answer may understand the specific acts of remissness with which he is charged and that material issues may be framed for trial.” If the defendant had complained that he was unable to properly prepare his defense because not apprised of the precise details of the act or acts of negligence upon which plaintiff intended to rely at the trial, he might have moved to have the complaint made more spe
Pointing out what they claim to be a fatal defect in the complaint, defendant’s counsel say that it does not even allege that at the time plaintiff fell into the basement — an accident undisputed and properly alleged — an opening existed between the building floor and the elevator floor. This objection is hypercritical. An obvious answer to it is that if there had been no hole there plaintiff would not and could not have fallen into the basement.
They also object that “the complaint is fatally defective
The defendant’s answer, after admitting some of the allegations of the complaint, consists otherwise of a general denial, followed by two affirmative defenses. In the first of these defendant pleads that plaintiff assumed the risks of his employment, alleging that at the time of the accident plaintiff went to the elevator for the purpose of entering and operating it and observed, knew and appreciated the position of the elevator and the danger incident to entering the same in its then position, the floor of the elevator being above the floor
It is plain that the defendant was not misled by any
Briefly, the contentions of the respective parties as to how the accident occurred may be summed up as follows: The plaintiff testified that as far as he knew he was the last one Avho used the elevator, and he applied the lock. The floor of the elevator was then level with the first floor of the building. The occasion of its use then was that he and Miss Saderstrom, a clerk in the defendant’s employ, had brought from the basement some boxes of goods Avhich they were packing to send away. When the elevator stopped one of the boxes rolled off the elevator to the floor a short distance from the elevator shaft. Then the plaintiff attended to some other errands, including several trips to the postoffiee. About half-past 3 in the afternoon M'iss Saderstrom and himself were packing a box for export when it became necessary to obtain the box which had rolled off the elevator. In stooping for this box, the dim outline of which he could see, visibility in the room being difficult, he either stumbled or slipped, plunging forAiard into the elevator shaft, the elevator having moved up or having been moved up a considerable distance above the floor. On his part, defendant admits that at the time of the
But defendant argues that the evidence on plaintiff’s part is insufficient to sustain the verdict. The point is not well
The question as to whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence was submitted to the jury and properly so. The same may be said as to the defense of assumption of risk. The court seems to have been duly mindful of the rules on this subject as laid down by this court in Stephens v. Elliott, 36 Mont. 92, 92 Pac. 45, Hollingsworth v. Davis-Daly Estate C. Co., supra, Cameron v. Judith M. & C. Co., 61 Mont. 118, 201 Pac. 575, and Grant v. Nihill, supra.
Defendant complains of the action of the court in giving certain instructions and in refusing to give others to the jury. There are twenty-two assignments of error on this score. Twenty-eight instructions were given to the jury by the court. In none of these was error committed against the defendant. On the contrary, if any criticism were warranted it would be because some of the instructions lean too strongly in defendant’s favor. As to the instructions offered by defendant which the court refused to give, we find that each is either covered
It is contended that the verdict is excessive. Plaintiff was
When he fell down the elevator shaft he lost consciousness; when he revived the morning after the accident he was at home in bed. He testified that his head was bruised and cut, collar-bone broken, right arm at the wrist fractured, right leg and ankle injured, and his body otherwise bruised. He was confined to his bed for three weeks. He said: “My neck was stiff and over to one side, and I couldn’t move my head without it hurting me — and I didn’t notice the pain so much in my arm as I did in my leg' at first — the leg and neck bothered me most for a While, and then a couple of days after that it started to bother me, my arm started to bother me worse then, and they got medicine to put on it and from the time they put that medicine on I started to hollering about 6 o’clock at night, when they started putting it on, and I hollered all night long, with that medicine in there * * * and they put something on it to take the pain out, and they gave me morphine— that was about the third night that they gave me morphine,
There was testimony tending to show that as a result of the accident plaintiff’s right wrist and consequently right hand and fingers are seriously and permanently weakened; that his right leg is atrophied, there is a contraction of the muscles and ligaments at the ankle joint, and inability to flex the foot in a
Other assignments of error we deem without merit.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.