210 Mass. 68 | Mass. | 1911
The plaintiff’s story in this case was that she ■had come down on the elevator from the top to the first floor to get a piece of satin. After getting it she returned to go up in the same way and found “the elevator was up.” She rang the bell and Kinsman came down with some matting in the elevator. She waited while he took it off, and then (to quote her own words) “I went to get on the elevator and as I put my right foot on the elevator, and before I had a chance to put the left foot on the elevator, it shot up. . . . The next thing I remember [was] hanging on to something; it seemed to me [to be] the bar under the elevator.” She testified that she hung on until she got nearly to the second floor, when she let go and fell to the bottom of the elevator pit some three feet below the basement floor.
The accident happened on March 30, 1906. Kinsman testified that he was employed to run the elevator on February 2 of the same year, six weeks and four days before the accident. He was then “ about twenty-three years of age,” and “ left school in June, 1902,” when he “was about eighteen,” having gone through the grammar school. He testified that he worked in a grocery and bakery for six months, then for a grocer “ about a year; ” that then he was in the grocery business for himself for a year and a month, then “ filled in a vacation time ” for two months, then worked for grocers a year and a half, then for the United Shoe Machinery Company for three months, and then for the defendant. He never had run an elevator before and was employed by the defendant at $5 a week to run the elevator in question.
The plaintiff was the head fitter in the defendant’s establishment and had been in their employ for fifteen or sixteen years. She testified that Kinsman “ didn’t seem to have the control of the elevator that the other boys had, but he seemed to be slower in his movements. . . . When you spoke to him he didn’t seem to grasp the meaning of what you said, and then he had rather
There was corrobation of the plaintiff’s testimony as to Kinsman’s incompetency. One of the defendant’s employees testified that she noticed something about Kinsman that struck her as peculiar and unusual; “ he didn’t talk as other people would talk. ... He would talk about things that I didn’t understand what he was talking about. He was laughing all the time. He would laugh at things anybody else wouldn’t laugh at. ... I have often seen him going up on the elevator and I would be on the elevator with him and he would be waving his hand to all the girls, some of the girls in the store and sometimes hollering out their names and laughing; and often times telling things that I wouldn’t understand what he would be talking about; couldn’t understand him; they would have no meaning to them — his words.” Another employee testified that “there was something in his manner that struck me as unusual and peculiar, . . . such as laughing and talking foolishly.” In answer to the question “ What was there to laugh at at the time that he laughed,” she testified: “ There wasn’t anything that I thought was. ... He seemed frivolous talking. . . . There didn’t seem to be any sense to his conversation.” After testifying that he stopped and opened the elevator door before getting level with the floor and that he often would start up- before closing it, she was asked, “ How far up would he go before he closed the door,” and she answered, “ Well, perhaps sometimes that far (indicating about two feet),” and that she observed that “ quite a number of times.” On cross-examination this witness testified: “ The boy’s talk was frivolous. My objection was not to the boy’s talking at all, but that there didn’t seem to be any sense to what he said.”
Another employee testified that from his observation of Kinsman “ he wasn’t quick enough, couldn’t think quick enough, . . . not quick enough for that place.” Another, that “he used to make faces at the girls in the cashier’s desk.”
At the defendant’s request the presiding judge, following the decision in Hatt v. Nay, 144 Mass. 186, refused to allow the plaintiff to introduce in evidence specific instances of negligence, and struck out some evidence of that kind which had been admitted. The learned counsel for the defendant insisted that the plaintiff’s witnesses should not give their opinions or testify to what they thought about Kinsman, and the presiding judge upheld him in this. The familiar rule which permitted the witnesses to state as matter of observation what they saw about Kinsman that was peculiar or unusual (see Clark v. Clark, 168 Mass. 523; McCoy v. Jordan, 184 Mass. 575; Gorham v. Moor, 197 Mass. 522; Jenkins v. Weston, 200 Mass. 488), was explained and acted upon by the presiding judge.
This evidence warranted a finding that Kinsman was half-witted and childish in general; and that in the particular here in question he did not have enough brains to run an elevator; that in fact he did not run the defendant’s elevator properly during the six to seven weeks in which he undertook to do so. The further finding was warranted that if the defendant had exercised due care it would have known this. It is possible that the jury might have taken a different view of the evidence. But it was at least possible for the jury to find that Kinsman, in regard to the duties he was employed to perform, was an incompetent servant; that the defendant ought to have known of it and consequently was negligent in continuing him in its employ; and that this negligence was the. cause of the injury to the plaintiff. Cayzer v. Taylor, 10 Gray, 274. Gilman v. Eastern Railroad, 10 Allen, 233; S. C. 13 Allen, 433.
The defense set up is the defense of volenti non fit injuria. Where a defendant otherwise liable for an injury sets up the doctrine of that maxim, he is setting up an affirmative defense which must be pleaded by him as such, and the burden of proving it is on him.
The question we have to decide is whether on the evidence in this case the jury should have been instructed that the defendant
In our opinion this case comes within the decision made in Fitzgerald v. Connecticut River Paper Co. 155 Mass. 155. That case was decided on the ground that the evidence in that case warranted a finding that the plaintiff did not wholly appreciate the risk and for that reason this affirmative defense was not made out as matter of law. There are subsequent cases which have been decided on the same ground. See Cooney v. Commonwealth Avenue Street Railway, 196 Mass. 11; Baldwin v. American Writing Paper Co. 196 Mass. 402; Herlihy v. Little, 200 Mass. 284. We are of opinion that within the decisions in these cases the jury would have been warranted in finding in the case at bar that the plaintiff did not wholly appreciate the risk of Kinsman’s incompetence and therefore that the affirmative defense had not been made out as matter of law.
In accordance with the terms of the report the entry must be
Judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,500.