Armour & Co. v. Zvega
Opinion of the Court
“This opening is provided with a perpendicular sliding door; said door is constructed of heavy, substantial material. To open said door it is necessary*314 to raise same perpendicularly in the guides for that purpose provided, and the defendant, Armour & Co., negligently and carelessly failed to provide a safe and suitable manner of holding said door in position when raised; * * * that the heavy door or slide which covered said opening through which the plaintiff: was required to move the barrels was sustained and held up only by a stick of wood, and that there was danger and great risk that this support would become dislodged and removed, thereby causing said heavy door to slide and fall with great force and violence, by reason of the vibration or jar caused by the elevator, or by the removal and handling of the barrels or tierces through said opening.”
At the trial it was disclosed that the lower corner of the east side of the sliding door had been eaten, supposedly by rats, so that the point of the door which would-rest upon the squeegee stick when the door was raised was rendered small, and that instead of having the full width and surface of the bottom of the door as originally constructed to rest upon the supporting stick, there was only a point of wood left which would rest upon the stick when in position, thus causing the door to be more liable to fall than as if said door was as originally constructed. There was a motion for the direction of a verdict in favor of Armour & Co. on the ground that the plaintiff had not complained in his complaint of any defect in the door, such as the evidence disclosed. The trial court was of the opinion, however, that the allegation of negligence in the complaint, with reference to the door, referred to the condition of the door at the time of the accident, and that the plaintiff had a right to urge as negligence the condition of the door as it existed at the time he was hurt. The record further discloses that Armour & Co. was given a continuance of four days, ostensibly for the purpose of meeting this new phase of the evidence. At the expiration of the adjournment the case was resumed, and the whole matter of the condition of the door was gone into, and the case finally went to the jury upon the question of whether it was negligence on the part of Armour & Co..to allow such a condition as existed in the door to remain. The applicable principles of law governing the case are well known and simple. It was the duty of Armour & Co. to use ordinary care to furnish Zvega with a reasonably safe place to perform his duties. Zvega on entering the service of Armour & Co., assumed all the risks and hazards of the service which were open and plainly obvious to him. He could rely upon the presumption that Armour & Co. had performed its duty. If by any negligence on his part he directly contributed to the injuries he received, he could not recover. He had been in the employ of Armour & Co. for two years, and in the particular service in which he was engaged at the time of his injury about two months. He had raised the door once before and placed the stick thereunder. The trial Court ruled that Zvega could not complain of the manner that Armour & Co. had adopted for holding the- door in position when raised, as the manner of so doing was fully known to him and was plainly obvious. It also ruled that the evidence in support of the two other grounds of alleged negligence, namely, the placing of the tierces of lard too near the elevator door, and insufficient light, would not authorize a verdict, and they were taken from the jury. As said before, the single question submitted to the jury was whether or not, Armour & Co. was negligent in allowing
In regard to the alleged error in the ruling of the court in allowing a recovery for the defect in the door, we think that, in view of the adjournment of the court and the full opportunity allowed to the defendant to go into that question, there was no prejudicial error. We do not think there was any error in the charge of the court upon the law of assumption of bisk, or upon the question of whether Zvega was guilty of contributory negligence. If he knew that the hole was in the door, he might have been guilty of contributory negligence for not placing the stick at the other end of the door where there was no hole. If he knew of the existence of the hole, he assumed the risk. ,The judge so charged the jury in both instances. So the case comes down to the narrow question, which was submitted to the jury, as to whether Zvega knew the hole was in the door. As has been said before, the majority of this court is of the opinion that there was evidence to go to the jury upon this question.
“If the defect in the lower left-hand corner of the door was so open and obvious and apparent that the plaintiff with the light that existed at the time, which was shown to have been good, could not have raised the door to the height to place the stick under it, and have placed said stick immediately under the left-hand lower corner of said door, without seeing and observing the defect then existing in that corner of the door, then with that knowledge and with the defect being so obvious and apparent, the plaintiff should be presumed to have assumed the risk resulting from said defect, and your verdict should be for the defendant.”
Laying aside the question as to whether the court would have been justified in telling the jury under the evidence that the light was good, we think, as the court told the jury that Zvega could not recover if he knew of the existence of the hole, and as the jury had the whole evidence before them from which to 'determine this fact, that it was not prejudicial error for the court to refuse to instruct them that if Zvega could not have placed the stick under the door without discovering the hole, he must be presumed to have assumed the risk. This was only another way of saying what the court had already said, and we must presume that if the jury was of the opinion that Zvega could not have placed the stick under the door without discovering the hole, they would have found that he knew of the same, and under the charge of the court would have returned a verdict accordingly.
We have considered the other errors assigned, and find them without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ARMOUR & CO. v. ZVEGA
- Status
- Published