152 N.Y.S. 1019 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The plaintiff was injured by the fall of an elevator operated by the defendant in its hotel. It appears that the plaintiff entered the elevator with a number of other persons upon the invitation of the defendant; that when the elevator reached the floor where the passengers desired to alight the operator failed to stop; that the elevator first went up too far, then dropped down and finally fell to the.bottom. The trial justice held that the circumstances surrounding the accident were sufficient to allow the reasonable inference that the elevator would not have fallen if it had been operated and maintained with due care. Thereafter the defendant showed that the elevator was inspected after the accident; that at that time the entire appliance, including the brakes, acted properly and that it inspected the elevator at reasonable inter
The plaintiff now contends that this evidence did not conclusively rebut the inference of negligence that would be reasonably raised from the surrounding circumstances. This inference or presumption arises from the fact that such an accident would not ordinarily happen under the circumstances testified to if the required degree of care had been used. To rebut this inference the defendant need not show the exact cause of the accident, but it must show that it was not negligent in regard to all probable cause. Sweeney v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., 158 App. Div. 449. In other words, since the circumstances surrounding the accident are sufficient to show that the accident would not ordinarily occur except through the'defendant’s negligence either in the operation or maintenance of the elevator, even though the exact cause of the accident cannot be shown, the inference of negligence which may be drawn from such circumstances can be rebutted only by proof of the cause of the accident and that such cause was not due to negligence on defendant’s part, or by such proof of actual care on the part of the defendant as will show that whatever may have been the cause of the accident it cannot be ascribed to any negligence on the part of the defendant.
In this case the operator of an elevator failed to control its motion so that it first ascended and then dropped to the bottom. An elevator is not per se a dangerous instrument. Where an operator is furnished with an elevator in proper condition he can ordinarily handle it by the use of due care. It follows
Judgment should be reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Hendrick, J., concurs.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.