34 A.D. 375 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in favor of .the plaintiff in an accident case.
The plaintiff, at the time of the occurrence, was between thirteen and.fourteen years old, and .was employed as a cash• girl' by the defendants, who carried on business in a large retail- store in the city of New York. In the premises in which their business was conducted was an elevator used by employees, and which, according to the testimony of one of the witnesses for the defendant, was commonly called the employees’ elevator. That elevator was also used at certain fixed, hours of the day as a lift for ashes. In its original design it was a freight elevator. At about ten o’clock on the night of the 5th of October, 1885, the plaintiff was sent on an errand, which required her to go from the basement to the fourth floor of the defendant’s store. She took the elevator, the car of which was so constructed that on three sides of it were iron lattice gates, com. monly called folding gates. -When the elevator was in motion these gates were closed, and, when closed, there was a gap between the floor of the car'and.the lower points of the lattice work. The par ran upon perpendicular guides at the sides of the well, and'the bearing of the car upon these guides was by appliances called shoes. The plaintiff, on the occasion in question, entered the car, there being other girls with her. When the car had reached, in its ascent, some point between the third and fourth-floors, the plaintiff’s right foot was thrust through the opening at the bottom of one of the folding gates .and came in contact with the casing or wall of the well or some projection, and she sustained injuries in consequence.
There is some evidence to show that the floóring of - the car had
On the trial of the cause no evidence was offered as to the incompetency of the servant operating the elevator, and certain matters of fact in certain aspects were taken away from the jury by instructions given at the request of the defendant. The court charged that defects in the gates had nothing to do with the case as they were not shown to have contributed in any degree to the accident. The court also charged that the alleged defects in the floor were not shown to have been the proximate cause of the accident. Those two considerations were thus eliminated from the case as independent causes of the accident. Whether that was properly done we need not now inquire, but we have examined the record to ascertain if there is in the evidence sufficient to support a finding of negligence in the maintenance or operation and allowance of . the use of an unsafe elevator, for that is the real issue. The duty incumbent upon the defendants was to provide a safe elevator for the usé of their employees. It is entirely immaterial whether this apparatus was properly, called a freight or a passenger elevator. The defendants could use any elevator or operating machinery they desired, provided reasonable care and prudence were employed in having it
The foregoing quotation indicates the. rule applicable in this case. with the 'qualification that if, the machinery was negligently or carelessly used in an unsafe condition to the knowledge of the defendants, actual' or imputable, the master’s duty would not be fulfilled. So far as the construction of the elevator in question is concerned and its use, the evidence is convincing that it was not in and of itself unsafe. It had been in use for some years; it had been originally built for a. freight elevator, but it had! been used by 'the employees ■ for a long time. It was not obviously dangerous. There is no evidence that any one was ever injured in or about the apparatus. . It was under the observation of responsible servants of the defendants,, who from time to time had' made reports of its being out of repair in. certain particulars, and repairs were always made. It is true that one of the defendants’ expert witnesses on cross-examination is made to say that he did not regard it a safe - elevator for passengers, but that was because he did not regard it as a passenger elevator at all. He subsequently withdrew that statement atid distinctly testified that he did-not mean to say that it was an unsafe elevator to carry passengers, but that what he meant was that it was not a passenger-elevator'at all, and that persons could ride in perfect safety-upon it., - The effect of all the testimony upon the subject of the apparatus, in and of itself being sufficient and safe, abundantly establishes that there was nothing in its construction which made it unsafe.
It is shown that this elevator was periodically inspected. • It also appears that it had been repaired recently. The last inspection was made in the month of August preceding the accident. The elevator was then found to be in good condition. The initial circumstance inducing the accident must have been, on the plaintiff’s theory, the jolt or jerk which caused the eccentric vibration, and it is sought to account for that upon the claim that the interval or space between . the guides and the shoes of the car was so great as to permit of this jolting or jerking, and that it was negligent and careless to use the elevator in that condition. These shoes were comparatively new; they were put on the ninth of June, prior to the accident, by the witness Potts, who put in new shoes, new guideways, and lined them up, and he swears that after those shoes were put on the lateral motion' possible was a quarter of an inch; that it was a trifling motion and that the shoes were so adjusted or could be so adjusted that they could be tightened by an adjustable nut to take up lost motion from wear and shrinkage. These shoes were two at the top of the car and two underneath at the bottom. In the ordinary course of the use of such an elevator, it would take two years for any considerable shrinkage to occur. The space between the guides and the shoes, when the car was in motion, was not more .than necéssary to give it play. These shoes were put on and
The plaintiff’s casé failed in that the proof did not establish that there was any remissness or neglect on the part of the defendants in maintaining and keeping in safe condition this apparatus for the use of their employees. On the point of defects in construction, or the use of machinery unsafe in and of itself, the evidence was not in such condition as to authorize a finding adverse to the defendants.
On all the testimony, we think the verdict cannot be sustained and that a new trial must be ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. ■
Van Brunt,. P. J., O’Brien and Ingraham,. JJ., concurred; McLaughlin, J., concurred in result.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appel- ■ lant to abide event.