ON MOTION FOR REHEARING OR CLARIFICATION
Based on our thorough review of the record and the decisions cited in Appellants’ Motion for Rehearing or Clarification, we find no basis for rehearing. However, because Appellants alleged that the four decisions cited in the motion “are dirеctly on point and require that a new trial be ordered in this case,” we believe it will be useful to clarify the basis of our per curiam affirmance
This cаuse arose from injuries allegedly sustained by Appellant, Mr. Szilagyi, while a passenger in an elevator in a hotel owned and operated by Appellee North Florida Hotel Corporation, and serviced and maintained by Appellee United States Elevator Corporation, the third-party defendant. Mr. Szilagyi and his wife brought an action in negligence.
The pertinent language in the applicable statute governing elevators states:
The elevator owner shall be responsible for the safe operation and proper maintenance of the elevator after it has been inspected and a certificate of operation has been issued by the division. The responsibilities of the elevator owner may be assigned by lease.
Section 399.02(5)(b), Florida Statutes (1985). At the charge conference, Appellants received an instruction on section 399.02, that the elevator owner is responsible for the safe operation and proper maintenance of the elevator. Apрellants requested an instruction that, pursuant to the statute, Ap-pellee was strictly liable for the safe operation and proper maintenance of the elevator, and that a violation of the statute is negligence per se or, altеrnatively, evidence of negligence. Appellants based their “negligence per se” request on the “shall” language in the statute. The trial court declined to give the requested standard instruction on either negligence per se or evidence оf negligence. The jury was instructed on the doctrine of res ipsa loqui-tur, and the trial court defined “negligence” for the jury and paraphrased subsection (5)(b) for the jury in the context of the discussion of negligence.
Appellants argue that when an elevator’s operation causes injury to a passenger, it is reversible error to fail to give a negligence per se instruction. In Appellants’ first cited decision, Reliance Electric Co. v. Humphrey,
An instruction that a violation of a given statute is negligence per se is appropriate in two circumstances: (1) when the statute is of the “strict liability” type, i.e., “designed to protect a particular class of persons from their inability to*1321 protect themselves, such as one prohibiting the sale of firearms to minors.” deJesus v. Seaboard Coastline Railroad,281 So.2d 198 , 201 (Fla.1973); and (2) when the statute “establishes a duty to take precautions to protect a particular class of persons from a particular injury or type of injury.” Ibid, [additional citations omitted] [emph. in orig.]
Id. The Fourth District Court found that the statute “falls squarely within the second category.”' Id. Thus, Reliance Electric is on point if the evidence in the case sub judice demonstrated “a violation of the statute” by Appellee. Cf. Winemiller v. Feddish,
The second decision on which Appellants rely, Seaboard Coastline R.R. Co. v. Addison,
When there is evidence of such a violation a party is entitled to a jury instruction thereon. This is simply a specific application of the equally established rule of law that a party is entitled to have the jury instructed upon his theory of the case when there is evidence to support the theory, [citation omitted]
Id. Accordingly, Addison is instructive when there is evidence to support the party’s theory of the case that a statutory violation occurred.
The facts in Appellants’ third case, Davis v. Otis Elevator Co.,
That instruction provided:
Violation of this statute is negligence. If you find that a person alleged to have been negligent violated this statute, such person was negligent. You shоuld then determine whether such negligence was a legal cause of the injury complained of.
The trial court refused to give the jury instruction, and the issue on appeal was whether the failure to instruct constituted reversible error. The elevator cоmpany suggested that, even if error, it was harmless because the trial court had thoroughly instructed the jury on the elements of negligence. Citing deJesus and Addison, the Fifth District Court in Davis concluded that the failure to give the requested instruction was reversible error and required a new trial. Id. at 278. Significantly, althоugh the expert was unable to pinpoint the exact cause of the overload, “the overload was the cause of the malfunction which would not have occurred but for the negligent maintenance of the elevator.” Id.
The fourth and final case on which Appellants rely is Nicosia v. Otis Elevator Co.,
Appellants’ suggestion to the contrary, we did not decide not to follow the above-cited precedents. Rather, we determined from the record before us that Appellants presented nо evidence demonstrating a violation of section 399.02(5)(b). That distinguishes the case at bar from Reliance Electric, Addison, Davis and Nicosia. Cf. Sotuyo v. Williams,
Abundant testimony was presented concerning the mechanics of elevator operation generally, and the recent operational history of thе elevator in which Appellants were riding on December 6, 1985. In particular, we reviewed the testimony of William Lam-precht, an elevator mechanic and former employee of United States Elevator Corporation, as well as William Hoelsсher, an electrical engineer. Lamprecht opined as to why the elevator abruptly stopped between the fourth and fifth floors, and he indicáted that the system worked as the safety mechanism was designed to do: the electrical mechaniсal interlock engaged, the safety circuit broke, and the car shut down. He had made certain recommendations to the hotel management, not all of which suggestions were followed. Some door rollers were replaced as part of thе routine maintenance procedures beginning in November 1985, and others had been replaced recently by the prior elevator servicing company. When Lamprecht was assigned to check on the elevators at the hotel, his inspections led him to conclude that they were safe.
Hoelscher opined that the ascending elevator probably decelerated suddenly rather than actually stopped, because of the interference of the moving elevator car with thе fourth-floor door-locking mechanism, and that the system operated “exactly the way it was designed to” by shutting down completely. Ordinarily, the elevator car should not catch a door roller because the system is designed to have a clearance or tolerance. However, door rollers are replaced very frequently in accordance with normal maintenance procedures, as occurred here.
Appellants submit that Hoelscher’s testimony supports their allegatiоns that Appel-lee was negligent in violation of section 399.02. After reviewing Hoelscher’s testimony, in particular the portions on which Appellants rely, we find that Hoelscher responded to a hypothetical situation where one is “not doing the maintenance properly.”
Q. And if you are not doing the maintenance properly and. you don’t catch the fact that a roller is bad, it catches the door and something happens like happened to the Szilagyis?
A. That is possible, yes.
In the ensuing testimony, Hoelscher testified thаt he believed the elevator was properly maintained.
That Mr. Szilagyi may have sustained injuries when the elevator’s speed changed does not, of itself, prove negligence on Appellee’s part. See Burns v. Otis Elevator Co.,
Three elements must be met to establish that the trial court’s failure to give Appellants’ requested jury instructions constituted reversible error:
1. The requested instruction accurately states the applicable law,
2. The facts in the case support giving the instruction, and
3. The instruction was necessary to allow the jury to properly resolve all issues in the case.
Riley v. Willis,
AFFIRMED.
