115 Cal. 437 | Cal. | 1896
Plaintiff had a verdict and judgment in this action for damages on account of personal injuries suffered by him while in the employ of defendant, a corporation, which injuries he alleged to be the consequence of defendant’s negligence. The immediate occasion of such injuries was the fall of a platform freight elevator of hoist used by defendant for transporting goods between the several floors of its warehouse, plaintiff being precipitated with the same from the third story to the basement of the building. It is insisted for reversal that plaintiff is clearly shown by the evidence to have been guilty of contributory negligence; that he knew the elevator to be dangerous to passengers, and that a rule of the establishment forbade employees to use it except for the carriage of freight; that, having such knowledge, he should have descended by a stairway, but was in fact using the elevator for his greater convenience in that particular when the accident occurred. Negligence of plaintiff was not pleaded in the answer, and he contends that it is therefore unavailable as a defense; we do not find it necessary to consider the question of pleading.
There was evidence that the elevator was often out of
The further point is made that defendant was not negligent, because, counsel say, immediately before the accident it caused all repairs to be made on the elevator which were deemed necessary by an expert. This view does not seem wholly consistent with the argument that the elevator was dangerous and known on all hands to be so. But the inquiry in this behalf was, whether defendant had used reasonable care to make the elevator safe for the purposes in which plaintiff was required to employ it; and here, also, was a case made for the consideration of the jury. It was in evidence that the hoist was of a class of “rather poor elevators,” and that there were defects in the same known to the manager which may have contributed to the accident, and which were not repaired at all. The expert himself testified that' the elevator, as repaired by him, was unsafe for passengers, and that he so informed the manager. We recommend that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.
Haynes, C., and Searls, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., Temple, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.