American Veterinary Laboratories v. Campbell Paint & Varnish Co.

59 S.W.2d 53, 227 Mo. App. 799, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 28
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 59 S.W.2d 53 (American Veterinary Laboratories v. Campbell Paint & Varnish Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Veterinary Laboratories v. Campbell Paint & Varnish Co., 59 S.W.2d 53, 227 Mo. App. 799, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 28 (Mo. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for wrongful death. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5,000 and defendant has appealed.

The facts show that about 4:10 P. M. of November 19, 1927, one Harry Melburn Rainwater, a minor fifteen years of age, came to *801 his death upon an elevator owned by the defendant. Deceased was employed by the plaintiff and the suit is brought under the provisions of section 3309, Revised Statutes 1929, being the subrogation section of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Plaintiff claims the right to maintain this action by virtue of having paid the parents of deceased the sum of $2600, as compensation under said act, on account of the death of their son.

The facts further show that plaintiff conducted a veterinary laboratory and supply business on a portion of the fifth floor of the building located at 1529 Walnut Street, in Kansas City; that it occupied the premises on that floor as the lessee of the defendant; that the other floors of the building were rented or leased by defendant to other tenants; that the building was equipped with one passenger elevator, located at the front of the building, two freight elevators, situated near the rear, and a stairway, also at the front, all of which were used by the various tenants and their employees. The freight elevators were connected with a dock on the ground floor. The doors at the dock were locked from the inside and could be opened therefrom, but during the time that defendant’s employees operated the freight elevator the doors remained unlocked. Defendant maintained an elevator operator during the week days with the exception of Saturday afternoons. It was on Saturday afternoon that the death occurred. It appears that probably all of the tenants, save plaintiff, had closed their places of business and that their employees had left at the time of the death.

Deceased was employed as an office, messenger and delivery boy by plaintiff. He was killed upon one of the freight elevators which opened upon the premises leased to plaintiff, after the operator of the elevator and the building superintendent had left the building. Other employees of plaintiff were in the habit, and it was their custom, to operate the elevator in question on Saturday afternoons after defendant’s operator left, for the purpose of carrying freight to the dock at the rear of the building. The elevator in question was not customarily used for passenger service except on occasions when the passenger elevator was broken down and the freight elevator was in charge of defendant’s operator. When the freight elevator in question was not in charge of defendant’s operator plaintiff’s employees customarily used the stairway, if the passenger elevator was not in service manned by an operator, unless such employee had freight or packages to transport, in which case he would use the freight elevator upon which deceased was killed.

We have spoken of two freight elevators on the premises but the only one involved in the case is the one upon which deceased was killed, as plaintiff and its employees did not use the other elevator. The freight elevator in question was located at the rear of the building and faced toward its rear or to the east and was situated about *802 twenty or twenty-five feet from the east wall. The passenger elevator was not running at the time of the casualty, but the stairway was open. There was a front exit from the building from the stairs. This exit was open but the entrance doors to the dock below were closed and locked.

The freight elevator in question was operated within an enclosed shaft and when there was no elevator man in charge it was moved or operated by pulling upon a cable within the shaft. When it was not at a given floor it could be brought there by reaching into the shaft and pulling upon the cable. About nine inches from the front of the elevator was situated a fire door made of corrugated iron, which, when raised, coiled itself upon a drum at the ceiling about fourteen feet above. There were springs at the drum acting as a balance or counter-balance. The door was raised and lowered by hand by the use of a handle at its bottom and was not controlled automatically or otherwise by the elevator. This door had been out of order for sometime and had been worked on by defendant in an effort to fix it, but it remained in its defective condition at the time of the death in question. The defect in the door consisted in its failure to stay up unless it was raised to a point seven or eight feet above the floor. Unless it was raised to this point it would gradually settle down.

Between the fire door and the elevator, and adjacent to the latter, there was a wooden gate fifty inches in height and five feet in width. Its weight is not given. It was raised by means of a rope attached to its middle at its top and extending some distance above, perhaps to the ceiling. It was operated in a four inch track with a counterbalance weight housed in the track on the north side of the opening. When the gate was down it was necessary to raise it by hand with the use of a ratchet. When the elevator was stationary at the floor the gate could be raised to the ceiling and by reason of the operation of the ratchet it would remain open and stationary without being held by any person. However, as soon as the elevator left the floor, either up or down, the gate would immediately fall, the apparatus causing this action being controlled automatically by the rise or descent of the elevator. Unless the elevator was immediately at the floor the gate would not stay up unless held by some one. If the elevator was at another floor it could be brought to the fifth floor by raising the gate and reaching into the elevator shaft and manipulating the rope or, perhaps by reaching over or through the gate and doing the same. The usual and proper way to stop the elevator at a floor was to raise the gate, if it had not already been raised, reach into the shaft and take hold of and manipulate the cable. There is no evidence of any defect in the wooden gate or in its operation. The fire door did not work automatically with either the gate or the elevator,

*803 As was Ms custom, defendant's operator of the freight elevator in question closed' it down about noon of the day of the casualty, at which time he turned out the light in the elevator. This light was attached to the cross-head at the top of the latter and was always burning when the elevator was in charge of the operator. There was a 200 candle-power electric light ten feet north of the elevator in question, which shed its light in front of the latter so that one could read a newspaper immediately in front of it without effort. This light also reflected somewhat upon the gate. However, there was positive evidence that when the light in the elevator was turned out it was dark therein and that it was also dark in the shaft immediately under the elevator as the elevator proceeded on upward toward the sixth floor. The fact that it was light immediately in front of the elevator and dark in the shaft and in the elevator was, no doubt, due to the fact that the light in question did not shine into the elevator, but was to its side and that there was an obstruction in the room in the way of a post, or other structure, immediately north of the elevator extending somewhat out toward the east.

Deceased had been employed by plaintiff about three months prior to his death.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.W.2d 53, 227 Mo. App. 799, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-veterinary-laboratories-v-campbell-paint-varnish-co-moctapp-1933.