Baynes v. Billings
Baynes v. Billings
Opinion of the Court
The defendants were the owners of a building, in the city of Providence, known at the “ Billings Block.” The several floors of this building were used for business purposes, and leased to different parties. Warren & Williams, jewelers, occupied the fourth floor, and the plaintiff was employed by that firm as an errand boy. The building was provided with a passenger elevator for the use and accommodation of tenants. This elevator, at the time of the accident — July 11, 1904 — was being run by a boy named William George. Upon the day of the accident the plaintiff and another boy, named Gaynor, together entered the elevator at the street floor. Gaynor at that time was in the employ of the Western Union Telegraph Company, and had a message for delivery to a firm that occupied the fifth floor. Gaynor had previously been employed in the Billings block. After the plaintiff and Gaynor were safely on board, the elevator ascended to the fifth floor, the plaintiff remaining therein. The elevator then waited, at the fifth floor, for Gaynor to deliver his message and return, and the plaintiff still remained therein. Then the elevator descended to the fourth floor, where the plaintiff was employed, and he then alighted, and at the request of the elevator-boy went *55 upon the top of the elevator to arrange, straighten, or pnt in place a screen designed to protect people in the elevator from any objects that might fall down the elevator-well. To enable the plaintiff to gain access to and leave the top of the elevator when he had finished, the elevator was lowered, by George, so that the top was on a level with the fourth floor. While the plaintiff was engaged upon the top of the elevator the bell was rung at the fifth floor and the elevator started upward, and the plaintiff, in attempting to get off the moving elevator, was caught and injured. The case was tried in the Superior Court, with a jury, November 5,1908, and at the conclusion of the testimony the court directed a verdict for the defendants.
The plaintiff has filed his bill of exceptions upon the following grounds:
“ 1. To the ruling or decision of said justice at the trial of said action in granting the defendants’ motion for the direction of a verdict for the defendants at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, as shown on page 71 of the transcript of testimony, etc., filed herewith.
“2. To the ruling or decision of said justice at the trial of said action in directing the jury to return a verdict for the defendants at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, as shown on page 72 of the transcript of testimony, etc., filed herewith.”
The statement in the grounds of exception, that a verdict was directed at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, is not correct. Testimony was offered on behalf of the defendants. The court first stated, in the absence of the jury, that he would direct a verdict and note an exception. Later, when the jury had been brought back, the court directed a verdict, and after the verdict was rendered for the defendant, noted the plaintiff’s exception.
The plaintiff has set forth grounds of exception both to the statement of the court on page 71 and to the direction of the verdict on page 72 of the transcript, which accounts for there being two grounds of exception to the same import.
An additional count to the declaration was withdrawn at the opening of the case, and the trial proceeded upon the original declaration.
*56 The plaintiff’s declaration alleges that the defendants were the owners of the building known as Billings block, at number 21 Eddy street, in said city of Providence, and that an elevator for the carriage of passengers was then and there provided, maintained, and operated in said building, and that the defendants were negligent in not providing and keeping in repair for said elevator some suitable device to prevent the elevator-car from being started until the door or doors opening into said elevator-shaft were closed, as- is provided and enacted under the provisions of section 16 of chapter 108 of the General Laws, as amended by chapter 921 of the Public Laws passed November 22, 1901, and as further amended by chapter 973 of the Public Laws passed April 3,1902.
The plaintiff then avers that while he was rightfully in said building as the employee of Warren & Williams, and rightfully and lawfully upon said elevator, and in the exercise of due care, and while in the act of leaving and stepping from said elevator, the door at the fourth floor of said building being open, that suddenly said elevator shot up, catching him between the jam of the door and the elevator-cage, by reason whereof plaintiff was injured, etc.
Section 16 of chapter 108, General Laws, provides that: “ Every passenger elevator shall be fitted with some mechanical device to prevent the elevator-car from being started until the door pr doors opening into the elevator-shaft are closed.”
Chapter 921 of the Public Laws retains the words above quoted, the changes effected by that chapter relating entirely to other matters.
Chapter 973 of the Public Laws also retains the same words .without either qualification or modification, but some new provisions are added, among which are the following: “In all cases in which any person shall suffer injury ... in consequence of the failure of the lessee or owner or owners of any building to comply with the provisions of this and the preceding section . . . such lessee and owner or owners shall be jointly and severally liable to any person so injured in an action of trespass on the case for damages for such injury. . . . It shall be no defence to said action that the person *57 injured . . . had knowledge that any elevator was being operated in said building contrary to the provisions of this and the preceding section, or that such person continued to ride in said elevator with said knowledge.”
Frank Billings testified: “C. Q. What instructions did-you ever give him in case anything got out of order? A. I' never gave him any instructions at all.” Later he said that the boys that run the elevator always go to the engineer if there is anything out of the way; that he told him to go to the-engineer, and that he didn’t mean that he gave him no instructions at all, and finally: “C. Q. Did you leave it to his own judgment for anything he didn’t need the engineer for? A.. I told him if there was anything he wanted the engineer for to-get him. 0. Q. And left it for him to say whether he needed the engineer or not; is that right? A. I suppose so.”
*59
It is also to be noted that the obligation to provide and maintain the device mentioned does not grow out of contract or depend upon invitation by the defendants. It is imposed by the statute. If the defendants had leased the building to another, with a stipulation that the lessee should keep the building in repair in all respects, including the elevator, and a tenant or a servant of the lessee had been injured because the elevator was operated without a suitable device to prevent its being started until the door or doors opening into the elevator-shaft were closed, the defendants would still have been liable as well as the lessee.
Under the circumstances shown, was not the question as to what instructions were really given by the defendants to the operator a question of fact to be passed upon by the jury? We think it was. Was it not a question for the jury whether the instructions authorized the boy, under the conditions shown —the displacement of the screen, with the attendant danger to passengers, as well as to the operator himself — to seek the assistance of the plaintiff, himself a passenger on the elevator, although his use as such of the same for the time being had just ceased when he alighted at the fourth floor? We cannot say that it was not. If the authority was sufficient, then the plaintiff was on the top of the elevator by right, and was not a trespasser or mere interloper. In such case the rule is stated in Wood, Master and Servant, section 455, as follows: “A person who voluntarily and without any employment undertakes to perform a service for another, stands in the same relation as a servant for the time being, and is regarded as assuming all the risks incident to the business. And this is so, even though the service is not wholly voluntary, but is induced by request of a servant in the defendant's employ.” See also Johnson v. Ashland Water Co., 71 Wis. 553; Wischam v. Rickards, 136 Pa. St. 109; Street Railway Co. v. Bolton, 43 Ohio St. 224, 226; Barstow v. Old Colony R. Co., 143 Mass. 535; Osborn v. Knox R. *61 Co., 68 Me. 49; Stevens v. Chamberlin, 100 Fed. 378; Penn. R. Co. v. Gallagher, 40 Ohio St. 637; Railroad v. Ward, 98 Term. 123; Mayton v. Texas, etc., R. Co., 63 Tex. 77.
In Johnson v. Ashland Water Co., supra, the court says (p. 556): “ It is claimed by the learned counsel for the appellant that the complaint does not state a cause- of action because it shows that the plaintiff was a mere volunteer in the work in which he was engaged at the time he received his injury. Under the allegations of the complaint the plaintiff was engaged in the defendant’s work at the request of the man in charge of the work; and, although it may be said that his employment was for a mere temporary purpose, and that the plaintiff was not expecting any pay for the work done, and in that sense the employment was voluntary, still, being in the defendant’s employment at the request of its servants or foreman, he was not a trespasser, and he was, for the time being, the servant of the defendant, and entitled to. the same protection as any other servant of the defendant, and probably subject to the same risks of injury from the negligence of his fellow-servants. This seems to be the rule established by the authorities and is supported by considerations of justice.”
Where an injury to a servant, who is free from contributory negligence, is caused by the concurrent negligence of the master and a fellow-servant, the master is liable. Venbuvr v. Lafayette Worsted Mills, 27 R. I. 89; Weeks v. Fletcher, 29 R. I. 112.
If the elevator had been equipped with a .device which would prevent the elevator-car from being started until the door opening into the elevator-shaft had been closed, it would not have been possible for the plaintiff to go upon the top of the elevator when requested to do so by the operator, because the elevator could not have been dropped down, with the door open, so as to permit him to get upon the top. ■ The operator testified that the elevator could be moved “if you put your finger on the button,” and that the “safety button,” as he called it, “ was on the side of the door in the shaft the lock is on.” He does not state whether the button was pressed, or whether the pressing of the button would detach the device only during *62 the time of its being pressed, or would detach it until means were taken to re-attach the device. If the elevator was equipped with a device to prevent the starting of the elevator while the door was open, and such device was in working order, it is evident that such button must have been pressed, and such pressure must have detached the device and left it unattached during the lowering of the elevator to a point where the plaintiff could get upon the top, as the operator could not have kept his finger upon the button while lowering the elevator to that position. It is evident also, from the testimony of the operator, that, if there was such a button, it was subject to his control, so that he could detach the device at will. If the plaintiff had not been on the top of the elevator when the operator started the same in response to the bell, he would not have been injured. He can not avail himself of the negligence of the operator against the defendants, because, for the time being, he was a fellow-servant with the operator. If, however, the negligence of the defendants concurred with that of the operator in causing the injury, the defendants would be liable. As ivas said in Weeks v. Fletcher, 29 R. I. 112, 115: "The neglect of the defendants, if it existed, was continuous and coincident in time with the act of the fellow servant.”
The doctrine of assumed risk can not be received as a defence in this action. The statute provides: “It shall be no de-fence to said action that the person injured . . . had knowledge that any elevator was being operated in said building contrary to the provisions of this and the preceding section, or that such person continued to ride in said elevator with such knowledge.” Leahy v. U. S. Cotton Co., 28 R. I. 252, 255.
As was said by this court in Weeks v. Fletcher, supra, “Such language will bear no restricted construction. The act is for the benefit of all persons, whether in or out of the elevator, who are upon the landlord’s premises as employees or by his invitation. If the .neglect of any of its provisions causes damage to such person without his fault, the act gives him a right of action therefor.”
The case should have gone to the jury on the questions of *63 the plaintiff’s due care, and of the defendants’ negligence. The direction of a verdict for the defendants was error.
The plaintiff’s exception is sustained, and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas F. Baynes, P. A., vs. Henry A. Billings Et Al.
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- 4 cases
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- Published