92 Iowa 328 | Iowa | 1894
On the second day of January, 1891, Thomas W. Hopkinson, a son of the plaintiff, fell into an elevator shaft of the defendant, and received injuries which caused his death within about half an hour. • He does not appear to have spoken or to have been conscious after receiving the injury. He was seventeen years of age at the time, and had been in the employment of the defendant about four months. He worked with his brother Will on the second and third floors of the warehouse of the defendant, in handling and packing merchandise. The building is supplied with a freight elevator, which is operated from below to the third floor. The shaft is inclosed on that floor by a barrier about three and one half feet in height. A part of the barrier consisted of a door or gate, which was hung with weights and cords, and was opened by raising and closed by lowering it. That afforded the means of passing into and out of the elevator. A gaslight fixture hung near the gate. The. third floor was about one hundred and fifty feet long and one-third as wide, and was well filled with merchandise, which in places was piled to the ceiling. Narrow spaces had been left for walks, which extended in various directions, one of which led-past the elevator. At a little after 5 o’clock in the afternoon of the day of the accident, the decedent, who was then on the second floor, was told to go to the third floor, and bring down a dozen wire potato mashers. He ascended to the third floor by means of a stairway, obtained the mashers, and on his return fell into the elevator shaft onto the elevator, a distance of twenty-five or thirty feet, and received the injuries which caused his death. The plaintiff alleges that the accident was caused, without fault or negligence on the part of the decedent, by the negligence of the defendant in permitting the elevator gate to be and remain open and unfit for use, in piling goods too near the gate, and in piling