139 N.Y.S. 385 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
On April 27, 1909, defendant conducted :a department store for the sale of• merchandise in the borough' of -MMiliattan and: city of New York. For the convenience of its pátróns it maintained and operated several passenger elevators1 rtmning fróíti.-'
The elevator car was suspended from two steel I-beams by means of two steel supports or straps which were about four feet in length. The upper portion of the strap was in a vertical position above the lower flange of the I-beam, and was bolted to the web. About midway of the strap, and where it came in contact with the flange, there was a right-angle bend called a “heel.” The strap continued in' a horizontal direction to a point above the extreme edge or nose of the flange, where there was another right-angle bend, and the strap was again continued in a vertical direction until it met a cross beam, to which it was fastened by bolts and nuts. There was a space between the horizontal part of the strap and the flange, starting from the heel of the strap and extending to the nose of the flange, owing to a curve in the latter. There is a conflict of evidence as to the width of this space, but there is some testimony that, starting from the heel, it gradually increased until, at the point where the second right-angle bend occurred, it was from one-eighth to three-sixteenths of an inch in width. The strap in passing over this point did not touch the edge of the flange, and was there unsupported. After the accident, it appeared that the cause of the fall of this elevator car was the breaking of each of these straps at the point called the heel. There was evidence to the effect that the operation of an elevator, hung upon straps as above described, produced a slight vibration at the point where the strap turned over the nose of the flange, and that this had an effect upon the metal, sometimes termed “ crystallization” and sometimes “fatigue of the metal.” In consequence thereof, in time the tensile strength of the metal deteriorated.
The crucial question in this case, therefore, is, was the defendant responsible for the installation and use of the straps here employed ? There was some evidence on the part of. plaintiff that there was a defect in the safety appliances, by reason of which the fall of the elevator was not checked, and,' also, that prior to the date of the accident a crack appeared in the heel of one of the straps, which indicated a dangerous condition, and which might have been discovered through careful inspection. Each of these grounds of liability was, with the consent of plaintiff, withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, and defendant’s liability, if any exist, must arise from negligence in the original installation and subsequent use. It appeared, without substantial dispute, that the
The learned trial justice submitted this question to the jury: “Was that [referring to this form of construction] so openly and obviously unfit for the purpose, incapable of supporting the burdens which would ordinarily be imposed upon it, that the owner of the building, the defendant here, should by the exercise of reasonable care ascertain that fact ? ” A verdict based upon an affirmative answer to that question is without evidence to support it
■ The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., and Woodward- J.. concurred- Hirschberg and Bich, JJ., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.