84 Pa. Super. 1 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1924
Argued May 2, 1924. In this action a husband and wife sued The Duquesne Light Company, claiming that because of the negligence of its employees the wife had sustained serious injuries. Plaintiffs recovered verdicts and from judgments entered thereon the company appeals. The only question raised by the assignments of error is whether defendant was entitled to binding instructions at the trial and to judgments on its motion for judgment n.o.v.
Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, the evidence warrants the following statement of facts: Defendant was engaged in installing new electric apparatus for the City of Pittsburgh in its North Side Market House. There was in the cellar of the Market House an electric transformer which belonged to the city, but which had never been used or connected with the electric system in the building. One Rapp, who was the city electrician, requested the superintendent of the defendant company for the north side of the city to move the transformer out of the cellar and place it on the sidewalk at a designated place close to the building. The transformer weighed about one and one-half tons and was filled with oil or grease. Before moving the transformer, defendant's men took the oil out of it. Then, by means of the apparatus which they had for the purpose of moving heavy articles, they raised the transformer from the cellar and set it up against the wall on the pavement at the place suggested by the city electrician, and put the oil into it again. Defendant presented a bill to the city for this work. As Mrs. Stubbs was walking along the pavement in front of the Market House, she slipped on some oil which extended across the pavement from the transformer to the curb and received the injuries complained of. The negligence charged was the placing of the transformer against the Market House in the condition *4 in which it was with grease running therefrom, the failure to take precaution to prevent grease from running over the sidewalk, and the failure to clean the grease from the portion of the sidewalk used by pedestrians. The accident happened about eight o'clock in the morning in the month of February. The transformer was placed upon the pavement about ten or eleven o'clock of the preceding day. The superintendent of the Market House, a city employee, testified for plaintiffs that he saw it done. One of the city engineers was also present and required defendant's men to replace the oil after the transformer was set on the pavement.
It cannot be denied that there was evidence which warranted a finding that there was a dangerous condition on the pavement. The contention of defendant is that its relation to the work of removing the transformer ceased when it was placed upon the pavement, that it had no further control over it and, therefore, is not liable for what happened thereafter. It asks us to apply the principle of law that was recognized and followed in Curtin v. Somerset,
In Congregation v. Smith,
We are of opinion that the principle of law declared in the above cases is controlling here. The placing of the transformer on the pavement by defendant's employees at the request of the city was no part of the work which defendant was employed to do. It was an independent operation done at the request of the city. Defendant might have left the transformer in the cellar. If the request had been to move a barrel of molasses from the cellar to the pavement above, it would hardly be contended that compliance with the request constituted a part of the work in installing the electric apparatus. It makes no difference whether defendant received compensation for moving the transformer or not. It was not a part of the work which defendant was doing under its contract. The case is the same as though defendant had not been engaged under its contract, but had been asked to move the transformer from the cellar to the pavement. When that job was finished defendant abandoned its temporary possession of and connection with the transformer, stepped out of control and the city resumed control of it and was responsible for conditions upon the pavement which resulted from its being placed there and which the superintendent of the Market House knew, or ought to have known, to exist. The duty of defendant to the public in connection with the transaction had *7 ceased and, if any injury occurred thereafter as the result of conditions existing when the city stepped in or which arose later, it is not liable. We are constrained to hold, therefore, that defendant was entitled to an affirmance of its point requesting binding instructions.
The appellee contends that the point upon which we have ruled the case was advanced for the first time in this court and that a new theory may not be advanced in the appellate court when the trial judge was given no opportunity to pass upon the question. The request for binding instructions and the motion for judgment n.o.v. were overruled. This requires us to consider all basic and fundamental errors, although no formal objection was made: Brown v. McCurdy, Admr.,
The judgments are reversed and here entered for defendant notwithstanding the verdicts.