Peoples' Bank v. Morgolofski

75 Md. 432 | Md. | 1892

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, who was defendant below, owns a building in the City of Baltimore, which is occupied by a number of tenants for business purposes.. There is an elevator in this building which was used both for passengers and freight.

The plaintiff, now appellee, was employed by one of these tenants, and was seriously injured by falling from the fourth floor to the cellar through the elevator shaft.

For the injuries thus sustained the plaintiff sued the defendant in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, and recovered-judgment. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The two questions, as usual in cases of this kind, are— first, was the defendant guilty of negligence? And, second, was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence ?

At the close of the testimony, both parties having produced witnesses to sustain their respective contentions, the plaintiff offered two prayers, which were granted, and the defendant seven, four of whigh were rejected and three granted. Inasmuch as defendant’s first prayer is a demurrer to the evidence, it will be necessary to examine the testimony at length.

At the time of the accident the plaintiff was working for a tenant of the defendant. He was proceeding up *439the stairway to the place of business of his employer on the fourth floor, when he heard the elevator going up the shaft. When he arrived at the fourth floor, he heard the elevator thrown open on that floor. Having accomplished the object of his visit, he returned to take the elevator, which was just outside the door of his employer’s office. His testimony was that he could not see at all in the hall, and, having heard the elevator go up, the door of the elevator being open, and the bar back, he was sure the elevator was in its place. He stepped in to take the elevator, and fell down five floors, into the basement, and was seriously and permanently injured, as set forth in the testimony.

This elevator was used every day for the people employed by the various tenants, and the boy in charge of it who was employed by the defendant, daily brought down the working people from the upper stories of the building. There was a painted window on one side of the elevator, and it was very dark there ; there was no gas light there, and the distance from the door out of which the plaintiff came on his way to take the elevator is only about two feet from the elevator door. On reexamination, the plaintiff said he heard the elevator door thrown open ; that he was sure the elevator was there, and that it was so dark that he could not see whether it was there or not. The elevator boy was not in charge .at the time of the accident, nor was he aware of it until informed by one of the witnesses.

Several of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that this boy did not attend to his duties properly, and that he was frequently called when he was not at his.post. The attention of the defendant, through its cashier, was called to these facts-, and also to the fact that the shaft was frequently left open. The place around the elevator door was dark when coming out of a light room.

On the part of' the defendant it was shown that on the day of the accident the elevator boy left the building be*440fore twelve- o’clock, and went to his dinner. The boy testified that on that day he cut off the water, and put the elevator in the celler. On his return, he found the plaintiff lying in the cellar, and the elevator at the sixth floor of the building. He did not know how the elevator got there, hut said that “the people” would run the elevator when he was at dinner, and that one of the workmen told him that some of the people, “whoever it was,” did not keep the gates fastened. One of the witnesses testified that this hoy was a worthless and careless fellow, “and that he was a most disgraceful liar.”

The defendant also offered testimony tending to show that the elevator in question was an ordinary freight elevator, and that it was not safe for passengers, and the cashier of the defendant denied -that he had been warned of the danger. He believed that Ross, who wqsin charge of the elevator, was a correct.hoy, and-he had given him repeated instructions that the elevator should be used only for freight. The people in the building had often run the elevator themselves. He admitted, however, that'he knew the elevator had been used as a passenger elevator to carry the people employed in the building, hut he said he was under the impression that the -defendant had no control over it. Although he was aware the elevator was so used for six years, he never gave notice of any kind that it was for. freight alone.

Upon these and other facts, Dot necessary further to-refer to, it was submitted to the jury by the instructions of the Court to find whether the defendant was guilty of negligence, and, if so, whether the plaintiff was-guilty of such contributory negligence as would prevent him from recovering notwithstanding the negligence of the defendant.

In the first place, it is. very clear from the foregoing-recital of the facts given in evidence that there was testi*441mony before the jury tending to prove, if the jury believed it,, that the defendant did not use that reasonable caution and vigilance which is required in the management of an elevator, which like the one described by the witnesses was used both for passengers and freight. The elevator was in charge of and operated by the defendant’s agent, and it was hound at all times to use reasonable caution and care to make the elevator safe for all persons who had a right to use it, or who did in fact use it with defendant’s knowledge and consent. Engel vs. Smith. 82 Mich., 1.

This reasonable rule is also laid down in Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, section 719, where it is said that, although elevator shafts and openings are now very generally used in warehouses and other places of business, they are dangerous, especially if located, in dark places, or in such close proximity to doors that a person entering-the door may step into them unawares. And it is also said that “when elevators remain under the control, of the owner of the building he is liable to his tenants for any defect in them, their appointments or their management w'hich reasonable care and vigilance would have prevented. ”

It must he admitted that the exercise of the most ordinary care by the defendant in this case would have resulted in keeping the elevator door closed, and in preventing the injury to the plaintiff.

But in regard to the other question, whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence there is more difficulty and doubt.

Ordinarily, of course, the question of negligence is one for the jury, hut sometimes it becomes the duty of the Court to instruct them that in spite of the negligence of the defendant the plaintiff cannot recover. The Court, however, will never assume this responsibility unless the case is a very clear one, and presents as was *442said, in the case of Cumberland Valley Railroad, Co. vs. Maugans, 61 Md., 53, and others decided by this Court, “some prominent and decisive act in regard to the effect and character of which no room is left for ordinary minds ■to differ.” The act relied on here to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff is the one established by his own testimony — namely, that he walked into the elevator shaft without looking to see if the elevator was there. He testified that he could not see at all, hut that he was sure with the door open and the bar hack, the elevator was in its place; and that it was so dark he could not see whether it was there or not. He does not say, he was not asked to say, whether he could see whether the elevator door was open, and the bar pulled back. The fair inference from his testimony is that he could see that the elevator door was open, hut could not see whether the elevator was or was not in its place. He says: “The door being open, -and •the bar back, ”, he was sure the elevator was there.

It must be remembered that the hall was dark in front of the elevator, and that the distance from the door of the elevator to the door from which the plaintiff came was only one. or two steps, or, as the witnesses say, from eighteen inches to two feet. He had, therefore, hut a moment either to look or to think.

In the case of Tousey vs. Roberts, 114 N. Y., 316, it is said that “an elevator for the carriage of persons is not like a railroad crossing at a highway, supposed to he a place of danger, to be approached with great caution; hut on the contrary it may be assumed, when the door is opened by an attendant to be a place which may he safely entered, without stopping to look, listen, or make a special examination.”

And in Dawson vs. Sloane, 49 N. Y., (Superior), 304, affirmed in 100 N. Y., 620, it was held that where a tenant in an apartment house saw the owner’s elevator *443boy sitting in a nodding position, and plaintiff, supposing the platform to be in its place,-but failing to inquire or stop to examine and see, stepped in and fell to tbe bottom of tbe shaft, it was held to be for the jury to decide if the appearances were not such as to throw the plaintiff off his guard; and a verdict for the plaintiff was sustained. In the course of its opinion in the case just cited, the Court, of Appeals of New York say: £>'The injury occurred from the plaintiff stepping into and falling down the well of an elevator, when the elevator carriage was at an upper floor. * * * The elevator faced the street door. The plaintiff walked from the street door towards the elevator. He saw that the elevator door was open, as he had often seen it before, and that the boy who ran the elevator was sitting by the elevator. There was no gas burning at the place. It was so dark that the plaintiff could not see the boy’s face, although he saw him in a nodding position. The plaintiff supposing the platform to be there, stepped inside and fell to the bottom. It is claimed that under these circumstances it was apparent that there was danger, and that the pflaintiff should have taken precautions, such as feeling whether the carriage was there, or waking the boy to ask him as to that fact, or getting in some other way information upon which he could safely proceed. This position is not valid.” It is for the jury, says the Court, to determine whether and to what extent the plaintiff might rely on the appearances presented.

And so we are of opinion that the Court below properly left it to the jury to find whether, under all the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff had a right to assume that the elevator was at the fourth floor where he stepped into the shaft.

We do not mean to say it is a clear question, but, on the contrary, as we have already said, it is one of considerable doubt whether the conduct of the plaintiff *444constitutes such contributory negligence as should prevent him from recovering. And where such doubt exists, the question of contributory negligence is one of fact, to be determined, as it was in this case, by the jury. Maugans’ Case, supra.

It was undoubtedly the duty of the defendant to operate the elevator in question with reasonable care and vigilance. Engel vs. Smith, and Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, ante; and the plaintiff had a right to assume that this duty would be faithfully performed.

So assuming, he would not be required to exercise that degree of caution which could properly and fairly be demanded of him under other circumstances. It is a sound rule of law, says Mr. Beach in his work on Contributory Negligence, p. 41, that it is not contributory negligence not to look for danger when there is no reason to apprehend any.- This principle is forcibly illustrated and applied in the recent cases.of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company vs. State, use of Hauer, 60 Md., 463, and Phil., Wilm. & Balto. R. R. Co. vs. Anderson, 72 Md., 523.

The first prayer granted on the part of the plaintiff fully and fairly submitted to the jury the question of negligence and contributory negligence, and the second properly instructed them on the measure of damages.

The defendant’s first prayer asked the Court to say that there was no legally sufficient evidence of negligence, and the second and third that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and was not entitled to recover.

In view of the authorities above cited, and for the reasons we have already given, we are of opinion that these prayers of the defendant were properly refused and those of the plaintiff were properly granted.

Defendant’s seventh prayer was properly refused, because, as we have seen, there was evidence before the *445jury tending to show that the defendant did authorize the use of the elevator for carrying passengers. Defendant’s special exception to plaintiff’s first prayer, on the ground that there was no evidence of the right of the plaintiff to use the elevator, is not properly before us, because it is not contained in the hills of exception signed and sealed by the trial judge.

(Decided 15th March 1892.)

Finding no error, the judgment appealed from will he affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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