195 Mass. 68 | Mass. | 1907
The plaintiff was route foreman for an ice company, and was assisting one of the drivers of the ice wagons in delivering ice. At 52 Pearl Street on the corner of Wendell Street one Saunders kept a restaurant on the ground floor of the building. His premises were divided by a partition about fifteen feet from the rear, so as to leave a main room in
It was proved and not disputed that the defendant, the owner of the building, retained control of the elevator, and was responsible for its condition to those who were entitled to use it or pass over it.
It is a question not free from difficulty whether there was evidence that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. He testified that, “ They always drove around to the rear on Wendell Street and went in through a passageway.” Upon the evidence he well might believe, and presumably did believe, that this was a safe way to deliver ice, unless there was something to indicate that the elevator was up. Naturally he would expect that there would be gates or other barriers to keep people from walking into the elevator well if the platform of the elevator was removed. In view of the darkness of the place, and the facts that the basket of ice was before him, at a height which would cut off much of his view of the floor, and that he-
. The next question is whether there was evidence that he was there by the defendant’s invitation. There was much evidence that he was there in the tenant’s right. The regular driver of the ice wagon testified, “ That was the way we were supposed to take it in. They objected to us taking it in the front way. Going in the front way would take you through the customers’ room, the restaurant, and going in this way from the alleyway would take you directly in to where the refrigerator was in the kitchen.” There was also much evidence that the tenant Saunders had a right to use the passageway over the elevator platform. His foreman had a key to the gates leading from the passageway to the sidewalk. Saunders testified, “that they always took the garbage out and brought their vegetables in through the passageway, and also the ice; that all heavy supplies came in through that entrance from Wendell Street across this elevator.” He also testified that he tended the fire which heated the building, and used the rear entrance and the elevator for taking out the ashes. One Nickerson, a witness called by the defendant, testified, of the occupants of the restaurant, in reference to the elevator, “ I know they use it and always have used it. ... I mean they use the elevator for a back entrance for everything.” The arrangement of the premises indicates that the use of the passageway was necessary to the convenient use of the restaurant.
The lease of the restaurant was not introduced, but we infer from the evidence that the right to use the passageway passed to Saunders, either as a part of the premises let, or as an appurtenance. There was ample evidence from which it might be inferred that the plaintiff was there under an implied invitation from the defendant. The jury were not bound to believe the testimony of the defendant.
Exceptions sustained.
The defendant testified that he gave Saunders a written lease but that his copy of the lease had been destroyed in a fire on his premises a year or two before; that there was nothing in the lease about the tenant having a