168 A. 846 | Md. | 1933
The plaintiff, William Harrison Waters, was employed by James J. Moran, for whom he went on April 18th, 1932, to the office of the defendant, the Gordon Sleeprite Corporation, on East Fayette Street, to collect a bill. While engaged on this errand he fell down the defendant's elevator shaft and was injured. He collected compensation from his employer's insurer, and he and the insurer sued the defendant for damages for the injuries sustained (Code, art. 101, sec. 58), and it is from a judgment in their favor that this appeal is taken.
The plaintiff, Waters, testified that he went to the office of the defendant, which was located on the north side of West Fayette Street, adjoining the mattress factory of the defendant on the west. The factory building is Nos. 1240 and 1242 Fayette Street, and the office No. 1244, each having an entrance from the street. The office and factory form an L, in which there is a yard extending from the rear of the office along the west side of the factory fifty feet to an alley. The only access to the factory from the office is from the street and across the yard. The ground floor of the factory is lighted by two windows on each side of the door facing the yard, and an elevator shaft is located opposite and about seven feet from the door. Waters said no one was in the office while he was there. He waited about five minutes, then went out of the office, across the yard and into the factory, and, as stated in the record, he "intended to go up to the elevator gate and holler up the shaft to attract attention, but before he got there he fell down the shaft because the gate nearest to him was up, leaving the shaft unprotected, there being no chain or bar across the pit; that the gate he saw down was on the far side; that it was dark at the elevator shaft and in the building but that he did see the hole." It appears that there were gates on opposite sides of the elevator, and that the near gate was up and the far *356 one down; that Waters mistook the far gate for the entrance to the elevator, and, in going toward it, passed under the near gate, which was up, and fell into the cellar. He had never been inside the building before the day of the accident. He had on one occasion delivered a machine at the rear door of the factory building, and did not see an elevator then.
The question here is whether the defendant owed Waters any duty for the violation of which it is answerable in damages, or were his injuries the result of his own voluntary act?
The rule by which liability is to be determined, as expressed by Judge Alvey in Maenner v. Carroll,
In these cases of latent or concealed danger on one's premises, it is always a question of fact as to whether one injured comes within the rule, and it is the facts in the case that make the decisions precedents. So that each case must depend largely upon its own facts. Dickey v. Hochschild, Kohn Co.,
More nearly akin in its facts is the case of Hyde v.Blumenthal,
When the plaintiff entered the office of the defendant he was within his rights, and there entitled to all the protection and safeguards of an invitee; but when he found no one there and went through the office, across the yard and into the factory, did he take his invitee's protection along with him? 45 Corpus Juris,
830, says: "The duty to keep premises safe for invitees does not necessarily apply to the entire premises. It extends to all portions of the premises which are included within the invitation and which it is necessary or convenient for the invitee to visit or use in the course of the business for which the invitation was extended and at which his presence should therefore reasonably be anticipated, or to which he is allowed to go. But there is no duty with respect to the safety of other portions of the premises, which are not intended for the use of the invitee and where he is not invited and should not reasonably be expected to go, because the invitee becomes a bare licensee if he goes for purposes of his own to some part of the premises other than that to which he was invited." Linton v. Baltimore Mfg. Co.,
When the plaintiff wandered into the factory of the defendant, he was a bare licensee, intruder, or volunteer, to whom the defendant, under the circumstances, owed no duty of protection, and he has no right to recover unless, as he contends, the proximate cause of his injury was the failure of the defendant to comply with the elevator ordinance of the City of Baltimore, the parts of which offered in evidence are as follows: Paragraph 26. "Freight enclosure doors may be made to hinge or slide up and down, or have semi-automatic gates not less than five feet high; but where hinged gates are used, there must be also a hinged guard rail inside, next to elevator shaft." Paragraph 45. "In all cases *359 the guards or gates of any elevator shall be kept closed when the elevator is not in actual use, under penalty of $25.00 fine."
With regard to the legal effect of such ordinances it is said in Hopper, McGaw Co. v. Kelly,
The plaintiff went into the factory building of his own volition, not in response to any invitation, express or implied, of the defendant, but in the pursuit of his employer's business, and on this theory he was paid compensation by the employer's insurer. The proximate cause of the injury was his voluntary act, and not the failure of the defendant to comply with the city ordinance. If both elevator gates had been down, his course would have been blocked and he would have been saved from injury, but it was his unwarranted act that set the thing in motion; his going from the part of the premises where his business properly took him, to a place where his presence could not have been anticipated by the defendant and where he would not reasonably be expected to go. What he did, and not what the defendant did not do, was the proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries, and the prayer for a directed verdict should have been granted.Monumental Motors Tours v. Becker,
Judgment reversed, with costs.