89 N.Y.S. 185 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Lead Opinion
In an action to recover damages for personal injuries the infant plaintiff had a verdict, and from the judgment entered thereon and from an order denying a motion for a new trial the defendant appeals.
The record presents a question of law of much interest, concerning which there are conflicting decisions not only in the courts of this State but in other jurisdictions. The defendant was employed to repair and put in. order an elevatoiywhich was used upon the premises of a corporation known as L. Kahner & Co., located in One Hun. dredth street, in the city of New York. That elevator was placed in the building by the Craves Elevator Company about thirteen years before the occurrence out of which this action arises. During the whole period, from the time of. its installation until April, 1902, it never had been repaired. In that month the defendant was employed to put it in perfect order, or, to quote from the testimony, to “ fix it up in first-class condition; as good as ever ; ” “ to examine it very
Without entering into Retail into the circumstances disclosed by the record, it is sufficient to say that, on the evidence, the jury were authorized to find (as they did) that the infant plaintiff was injured by reason of negligence on the part of the defendant’s servants in making the repairs to the machinery by which the elevator car was moved. The accident occurred on September 24, 1902. On the car had been placed some empty tobacco boxes to be lifted from the lower- to the upper part of the building. It seems that, upon the operator pulling the check rope, the car would not move. He called upon the plaintiff, who was standing on a floor below, and asked him to see what was the matter. Thereupon the plaintiff, leaning over into the elevator shaft or well, pulled the check rope with a slight pull, and then a wheel, which was connected with the elevator shaft at the top of the apparatus, fell and struck Mm on the forehead and he suffered injuries of the severest character.
On the whole evidence the jury were justified in finding that
•Taking into consideration all of the testimony in the case and giving it due weight, the jury were justified in believing that the initial cause of this disaster was the application of excessive force in the introduction of the key to secure the brake' wheel, and that this unskillful or negligent conduct made that machine in fact a dangerous appliance. The appeal is only from the judgment and from every part thereof. The facts are not open to re-examination. We have, therefore, nothing to consider but questions of law which have been very ably presented and argued by counsel.
It is assumed that the defendant stands in the same relation that a manufacturer who originally furnished the apparatus would stand, and that the ordinary rule of law would be that, in the absence of contractual relations or of privity between the manufacturer and a
In the case at bar the negligence of the defendant in creating the crack in the brake wheel of a high unprotected elevator shaft rendered it unsafe and imminently dangerous to human life and we think that the case cited is authority for maintaining this action. So, in Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co. (56 N. Y. 124) the same principle was enunciated and the decision went up on the ground, not that the machine was in its nature' imminently dangerous to human life, but
We think the rule, as laid down in the Dmies case should be applied here, and yet we find ourselves in direct opposition to the decision of the Appellate Division in the fourth department in the case of Kuelling v. Roderick Lean Mfg. Co. (88 App. Div. 309). We recognize the value of the learned and exhaustive consideration of the authorities made in that case, but we are compelled to dissent from the conclusion at which the court arrived and adhere to what was stated to be the law in the Dmies case.
Without further elaboration of this subject, we are of the opinion that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
O’Brien, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the affirmance of this judgment upon the ground that when the defendant undertook to repair the elevator the fall of ■which caused the plaintiff’s injuries, it assumed a duty to exercise care in the performance of its contract, a neglect of which causing injury imposed a liability. . Such obligation extended to the other party to the contract and to his employees and others occupying the premises in which the elevator was located ; and the plaintiff, a son
If the plaintiff had been injured by the negligence of the defendant when engaged in making the repairs to the elevator, I assume there would be no.-question but that the- defendant would be liable; and I do not think that the defendant is relieved from liability because it had finished the work, but by its negligence had left the elevator in such a condition that it caused the injury. The liability is based upon the neglect of the defendant to- perform a duty which it assumed when it undertook to make the repairs. In consequence of that neglect the plaintiff, when engaged in the performance of his duties upon the premises, was injured, and for the damages sus- \ tained the defendant is, I think, liable.
In the case of the owner of a tenement house who leases apartments, retaining control of the halls and stairways, there is imposed the duty of keeping them in repair, and a person lawfully upon -the premises, who is injured by a neglect of the landlord to perform that duty, has a cause of action to recover for .such injuries. The liability is not limited to the lessee. And upon the same- principle the obligation of the defendant is not limited to the person with whom he made the contract, but extends to those who are lawfully upon the premises.
The action is based on defendant’s negligence in the performance of a contract, not upon a breach of the contract; and any one who is injured by that negligence is, I think,' entitled to maintain an action to recover the damages thus sustained.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs'.