The action is for negligence brought against the lessee of a business building who subleased to Various tenants, and who furnished and maintained a freight elevator therein for their common use. The deceased, an expressman, being engaged upon the premises in the lawful business of a tenant, was there upon the implied invitation of the defendant, who owed to him the duty of exercising reasonable care in seeing that the premises, including this elevator, were safe. (Griffen v. Manice, 166 N. Y. 188.) This tenant occupied the sixth or top floor of the building, and the elevator was at rest opposite his rooms fifteen inches below the level of the floor, for the construction of the elevator did not permit it to be brought to a level therewith. The deceased was compelled to step into the car of the elevator in' order to place and to arrange the tenant’s boxes upon it. He had placed thereon six boxes, weighing in all about 400 pounds,, which was much less than the weight power of the elevator. As he stepped into, the car to place the seventh box thereon, the elevator fell to the ground, carrying him down to his death. The construction consisted of a horizontal shaft carrying a large, wheel,' worked by a rope, and furnishing the motive power. The same shaft also carried a small pinion wheel, whose teeth meshed with those of a larger wheel, carried on a second or drum shaft. The drum shaft carried two drums ; the rope of one held the elevator car, and the rope of the other held the weight which played up and down a slot, and served as a counterbalance. The car was controlled by a brake of a rope and a weight sufficient to arrest its progress. The only witness of the accident was Parcell, a servant of the tenant, who, at the time, was helping the deceased. He
The facts adduced by the plaintiff were that the car was at rest, but necessarily at fifteen inches below the floor, that theretofore boxes of machinery had been placed down upon it, that the load was less than the weight power of the car, that it was necessary for the deceased to go upon the car in order to load it, that the deceased stepped, upon it, that the car fell, that the check line was secure, that the wheels were at the time seen to be out of gear, and that the key was subsequently found on. the sixth floor uninjured. Further testimony for the plaintiff is that the wheels could not have been out of gear unless the key was out, that the key could not have been out before the accident, that the jar of the boxes of machinery put down upon.a car fifteen inches below the floor was a cause for the shifting of the gear, provided the key was inadequate, or for the falling out of the key provided it was inadequate.
I think that this presented as questions for the jury whether the accident was due to the displacement of the key of the pinion wheel, and whether such displacement was due to the defective construction of the elevator. The next question is whether the jury could find the defendant culpable. The test is whether the defendant was reasonably careful and prudent in furnishing an elevator adequate and proper for the use to which it was to be applied. (Montgomery v. Bloomingdale, 34 App. Div. 375, and authorities cited.) One of the plaintiff’s experts testified that the key was not properly, mechanically, put in because it was lacking about three-eighths of an inch from coming through to the further end of the
The appellant insists that he has fulfilled the obligation cast upon him, first, within the rule that “.when an appliance or machine not obviously dangerous, has been in daily use for a long time, and has uniformly proved adequate, safe and convenient, its use may be continued without the imputation of imprudence or carelessness,” taking the statement of the rule from the language of the opinion in Stringham, v. Hilton (111 N. Y. 188, 197). The appellant cites certain authorities. In Lafflin v. Buffalo & Southwestern R. R. Co. (106 N. Y. 136, 138) Earl, J., writes : “There is no complaint that the platform was out of repair, or that it was improperly constructed.” In BurTte v. Witherbee (98 Y. Y. 562) there was no claim that the car track or cable was defective, and none of them broke. Earl, J., writes that there was no conflicting evidence in the case, and the sole question was whether the hook that slipped should have been secured by a bolt fastened with a key. The car was drawn by a cable hooked into a bail; the cable necessarily must have been shifted from one car to another; it was shown that the mode- proposed of securing the hook would not answer where two cars were used; that the hook had been used in the mine for years, and in other mines: It was held that this was sufficient care on the part of the master, and, further, that the servant was as capable to judge of the safety of the shifting appliance as the master. Devlin v. Smith (89 N. Y. 470, 476) states the rule that the duty of the employer to his servant is reasonable care, and where injury results from implements furnished, knowledge of the defect must be brought home, or proof made of the failure to exercise proper care to discern it. In Stringham v. Hilton (supra) the court say that they find no evidence that the machine was defective in construction. “ If
But in the case at bar there was proof upon which the jury might find that there were defects in the construction of the elevator. There is no doubt that -the defendant did cause the machine to be overhauled shortly before this accident, in consequence of an accident due to a broken cable, and that he gave instructions “ to repair the cable and see that everything was O. K. and all right.” Mulholland, the workman in charge, testified : “ Before this last accident I had examined minutely and particularly that pin as a special object of examination, that and all the rest, inasmuch as it was in its place where it belonged ; all of it was concealed with the exception of about half an inch; I didn’t take it out and examine it, certainly not; I know about the condition of that pin inside, the part that was not in view or exposed. * * * I sounded this key with a hammer, the head of the key; that was the extent' of the examination; * * * the striking would indicate whether it was large enough to fit the place it was in ; I mean to say that by striking the hammer on the head of it I could tell whether it was tight or.loose; the object of striking the key on the head was to tell whether it would move or not.” The construction of the key and its placement were open to outside inspection. - This is clear from the testimony of the defendant’s experts, Mulholland and Tismer. “ Reasonable inspection is necessary and required.” (Carlson v. Phœnix B. Co., 132 N. Y. 213, 278.) There must be “ careful inspection or the application of appropriate tests.” (Probst v. Delamater, 100 N. Y. 266, 273.) In Durkin v. Sharp (88 N. Y. 225) the court refused to charge that if the jury believed the track had been inspected within a reasonable time prior to the accident by a competent inspector of the defendant, and had by him been adjudged to be in a safe condition, the plaintiff cannot recover, and it was held that the exception to the refusal was not well taken and to excuse him the track must have been carefully inspected by a competent inspector. In view of the testimony that the key used was improper for the purpose, not in that it was defective, but in that it was inadequate, whether the inspection was such as should have been made was, I think, a question of fact for the jury.
The judgment and order must be affirmed, with costs.
AH concurred, except Sewell, J., dissenting.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.