Rippucci v. Commonwealth Construction Co.
Rippucci v. Commonwealth Construction Co.
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of tort brought by a servant against his master to recover for injuries received by reason of the fall of an elevator while the plaintiff was upon it. The defendant was a contractor engaged in the construction of a building ten stories in height. In the work of construction it put in the uncompleted building two elevators, which were side by side in an open shaft at the corners of which there were standing upright timbers. They were simply platforms, and were raised and lowered by a steel cable which ran over a sheave at the tenth story and thence back to an engine in the basement. They were controlled by bells at the engine, of different tones for the different elevators. These bells were struck by “touch buttons” at each story. So far as appears, the elevators were used only for transporting materials used in the construction of the building. We understand that these elevators were not a part of the building as ultimately to be constructed, but were simply contrivances temporarily used in its construction.
The principal question is whether the provisions of R. L. c. 104, § 27, are applicable to elevators temporarily maintained by builders for the transportation of materials used in the construction of the building in which the elevator is set up. The section, which is somewhat long, reads as follows: “ Elevator cabs or cars, whether used for freight or passengers, shall be provided with a suitable mechanical device by which they will be securely held in the event of an accident to the shipper rope or hoisting machinery, or any similar accident, and they shall be guarded and equipped with some attachment or device fastened to the elevator cab or car, elevator well, or floor of the building, which shall prevent any person from being caught between the floor of the cab or car and the floor of the building while attempting to enter or leave the elevator. Elevators used for carrying freight shall be equipped with a suitable device which shall act as a danger signal to warn people of the approach of the elevator.
It becomes necessary to look to some extent into the history of the legislation on this subject. St. 1877, c. 214, § 2, is as follows:
“ In any manufacturing establishment in which there shall exist or be placed any hoistway, hatchway, elevator or well-hole, the openings thereof through and upon each floor of such establishment shall be provided with and protected by good and sufficient trap-doors, or self closing hatches and safety-catches, or such other safeguards as the inspectors hereinafter mentioned shall direct; and all due diligence shall be used to keep such trap-doors closed at all times, except when in actual use by the occupant or occupants of the building'having the use and control of the same.”
This section appears in a statute entitled “ An Act relating to the inspection of factories and public buildings.” The language of this section, taken in connection with the purpose and scope of the whole statute, shows that the section was not intended to apply to a “ hoistway, hatchway, elevator or well-hole ” which was temporarily maintained simply as one of the contrivances used in the construction of a building. The section is plainly dealing with a building ready for occupancy, and not with such conditions as may temporarily arise in its construction.
This section is inserted in substance in Pub. Sts. c. 104, § 14.
The building laws were codified in St. 1894, c. 481, and the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 104, § 14, as amended by St. 1882, c. 208, were then placed in two sections (§§ 41, 42), the first of which (§ 41) contained the provision relating to “ hoistways, hatchways, elevators and well holes,” and the second (§ 42) related to elevator cabs or cars, and was substantially the same as the amendment which was placed at the end of Pub. Sts. c. 104, § 14, by St. 1882, c. 208. There is nothing in this codification showing any intention on the part of the Legislature to extend the scope of the provisions under consideration. St. 1894, c. 481, § 42, was finally amended by St. 1901, c. 489, so as to be substantially the same as R. L. c. 104, § 27, which is the section in question.
It will be observed that this last is a part of a system devised for the inspection of buildings as were the various similar sections preceding it. The whole statute of which it is a part plainly is dealing with the features of a building as such, and many of its sections cannot refer to a building in process of con
Taking into consideration the history of this kind of legislation and the language and setting of the section, we are of opinion that it does not apply to an elevator temporarily used as a part of the ways, works and machinery in the construction of a building. We find no case in our own reports where there has been a claim for injuries received upon such an elevator. In every case the elevator has been a part of the building as such. The ruling that the provisions of this section applied to this elevator was wrong. By the terms of the reservation therefore, a
New trial is granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Pellegrino Rippucci v. Commonwealth Construction Company
- Status
- Published