257 Pa. 583 | Pa. | 1917
Opinion by
The plaintiff, a carpenter, was injured while performing services in the employ of the defendant company ; he sued in trespass, alleging negligence, and recovered a verdict, upon which judgment was entered; defendant has appealed.
The following facts may be stated as determined by the jury: On the date of the accident, November 4, 1915, the plaintiff, Joseph Leotti, was about forty years of age, and a vigorous, healthy man, with a substantial earning capacity; he was instructed by the engineer of the defendant company, who had authority to give the order in question, to go into an elevator pit, in the cellar of the defendant’s premises, for the purpose of repairing the gates of the elevator; whereupon plaintiff said to the engineer, “Will you guarantee that you will not allow this elevator to come down on me?” and the latter replied, “Yes, I will station a man at the first floor, to see that it will not come any lower than that”; relying upon
While appellant admitted the plaintiff was told to repair the elevator gates, yet it denied he had been given any promise whatever that precautions would be taken to insure his safety. In fact, one witness for defendant went so far as to state that, at the time the instructions for the work were given, the engineer left plaintiff’s side, in order to get some materials for use in connection with the repairs about to be made, and, as he did so, expressly told the latter not to go near the elevator until he, the engineer, should come back, adding, "I will operate the elevator and you will work, you will be safer”; this was the answer on the main branch of the case. There was no pretense that any precautions had been taken to insure the safety of plaintiff, the theory of the defense being that neither the engineer nor any one else in authority knew, or had an opportunity to know, that the injured man had placed himself in a position of danger, and, therefore, that he did so at his own risk. It is evident, however, that the jury disbelieved the testimony and rejected the theory of the defendant, accepting that of the plaintiff; and, under the circumstances, they reasonably could draw the conclusion that .the former had been guilty of negligence toward the latter in permitting the elevator to descend upon him without warning: Powell v. S. Morgan Smith Co., 237 Pa. 272.
All the issues involved were submitted to the jury in a careful, comprehensive charge, which was eminently fair to both sides; but the appellant complains of several rulings of the learned court below, which call for consideration. This case was tried once before, but, for some unexplained reason, the former verdict in appellee’s favor was set aside. The plaintiff testified through an interpreter; at the other trial, when under cross-
It is strongly contended that the trial judge erred in refusing a point for charge submitted by defendant, as
There is but one other assignment which requires discussion, and that concerns the refusal to withdraw a juror on motion of defendant. When senior counsel for plaintiff was summing up, he said, “This case was tried once before, and plaintiff went on the witness stand and told his story; he told identically the same story before you.” At this point, counsel for defendant, objected and made the motion which we are now considering. Counsel for plaintiff withdrew the remark; whereupon the trial judge instructed the jury they were to ignore the incident and determine the case exclusively upon the evidence presented before them. The notes of testimony show that, during the examination of the witnesses, sev
The assignments of error are all overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.