26 N.Y.S. 852 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This action is by an employe against his employer to recover damages for a personal injury, caused, it is alleged, by the neglect of the defendant to provide a safe elevator, and keep it in repair. The Lorillard estate is the owner of a building, completed in 1890, on lots Nos. 151 and 153, South Fifth avenue, which was leased to Frankenthal Bros., who sublet to the defendant the store floor and basement of the building, “including the steam heat and elevator usage” The defendant entered into possession on February 1, 1890, but the building was not fully completed until May or June following, during which months the elevator was put in by the estate for the use of the defendant. The carriage of the elevator consists of a platform about twelve feet long by six feet wide, suspended by four cables, and runs between the basement and the store floor, a distance of about nine feet. The elevator was kept in place by guides which extended from the floor of the basement to the store floor, but not above, as it was not designed to pass that floor. It is for freight, not for passengers; and was operated by steam, which was furnished by Frankenthal Bros., who employed the engineer. The defendant used the first floor and basement for the storage and sale of wagons. September 29, 1890, the plaintiff, who had been employed by the defendant five or six months, entered the basement for the purpose of removing a wagon. In going to the place where it wras stored, he passed underneath the elevator, which fell upon him from the second floor, inflicting severe and permanent injuries. The elevator was operated by defendant’s employes, no particular person having charge of it. In the language of the plaintiff: “Everybody ran the elevator. I did myself. I didn’t run it quite as much as anybody else. The men who worked there,—Tom Considine, or any one who worked in there,— they used the elevator.” The cause of the fall of the elevator is not clearly established by the evidence. The elevator was not inclosed in a shaft, but was open on all sides. There is some evidence that it was so adjusted that the platform, instead of stopping, as it was designed, even with the store floor, would sometimes rise five or six inches above it, and when it came down, instead of passing through the aperture, one side or end of it would catch on the floor; and, if the connection with the power were not shut off, the drums
“Q. Did you see the elevator after it had fallen on John Moran? A. No. I seen it falling twice before it fell on John Moran. It came near killing me. It took off the frame going down. The north side catched it, and then it went off on a slope,—and if you want to check it, you were afraid,—on the northwest end, where the brake was. The check was on the northwest end. I seen it plain with my eyes. The check was in the. northwest end, and it stood in a foot under the elevator on the north side; and of course you had to run under the elevator to stop it. If you didn’t you couldn’t get at it any other way. The men had to run under the elevator to stop it. You couldn’t do it any other way. The check line ran down through the platform of the elevator. You had to check it. When you were going down you pulled down the check, and when you were going up you pulled it so, [illustrating.] Q. On the first occasion when you saw this elevator fall, describe how it happened. A. There were two men working there, and this elevator fell down. I was just working on carriages, over the elevator, at the same time. I ran to it, and seen it, and then Mr. Smith went and got this Mr. Pinney to print letters underneath that elevator that any man that would leave anything under the elevator, why, he would be fined or discharged. This is all I have to say. Then the elevator fell that time in March. That was the only regulation that was made. Then it fell again in February, and I was under it at the same time, and only that I had God’s blessing I would be killed. That' was in February, 1890. I will tell you how the elevator acted when it was in operation. ' If it went three inches above the floor it struck on the frame, and in coming down it went oft on a slope,—come right down on a slope.”
Werner, who put up the elevator, testified that it was not done until May or June, 1890, so it is not probable that it was out of repair in February and March before.
'Considine testified:
“Q. Didn’t you notice that that elevator would veer from side to side? A. Well, a little, when there was a heavy load on it. Q. And as it went up beyond the floor of the elevator it was likely to catch on the floor? A. Well, it did catch once or twice, and they had it fixed. Q. You have seen it there? A. I didn’t see it, but I heard she was fixed. (Objected to. Stricken out.) A. No, sir. Q. But you have seen it catch on the flooring? A. No, sir; but I heard.”
This evidence has no probative force, as the witness neither saw the elevator work defectively nor did he see it repaired. He simply heard that it had caught on the floor, and that it had been fixed. The only person about the premises who represented the defendant, or who was engaged in discharging master’s duties, was the