Ammer v. Postal

134 N.W. 453, 168 Mich. 405, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 543
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1912
DocketDocket No. 156
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 N.W. 453 (Ammer v. Postal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammer v. Postal, 134 N.W. 453, 168 Mich. 405, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 543 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This action is brought by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries sustained on July 16, 1905, while in the employ of defendants, engaged in running an electrical passenger elevator in the Griswold House in the city of Detroit, of which hotel defendants were proprietors.

Plaintiff’s declaration, is in proper legal form, with the usual allegations and averments in general terms, charging failure on the part of defendants to provide reasonably safe appliances with which to operate the elevator, failure to inspect and keep the same in repair, a generally unsafe and defective condition, and particularly that the brake and safety catch appliances of said elevator became out of repair, defective, and unsafe, of which fact defendants [407]*407had due notice, by reason of which, while plaintiff was operating the elevator in a proper manner and with due care, it dropped a distance of five stories to the basement, inflicting on him serious and permanent injuries.

Defendants pleaded the general issue with the statute of limitations added, against objection, at the trial. The latter plea was not passed upon by the trial court, and is not properly presented by the record or briefs for consideration here.

The case was tried in the Wayne county circuit court before a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony,' the trial judge, of his own motion, directed a verdict for defendants on the ground that plaintiff had failed to produce sufficient evidence of defendants’ negligence to justify submitting the same to a jury, stating that it would be absolute speculation and conjecture on their part as to what caused the accident. Plaintiff’s assignment of error is the ruling of the court that the testimony was only speculative, followed by taking the case from the jury and directing a verdict in favor of defendants. It therefore becomes necessary to ascertain if there was any competent evidence produced by plaintiff of defendants’ negligence in the particulars alleged in the declaration.

Plaintiff testified that he had worked on elevators off and on for 16 years, had operated electric elevators before, but was not a mechanic and did not understand their construction and machinery, except that he knew how to start and stop them, and cut off the electric current, and do other things proper for their operation. He first had trouble with this elevator four weeks before the accident, when he could not get down from the sixth floor without help from the engineer, having gone up against the beams, which jarred or sprung the safety catch. He told the manager and informed him that he did not know how to set the safety catch; reported it to the engineer, who looked after the elevator. The catch was tied back with a piece of rope and wire. He was shoved up against the beams four different times. About two weeks after the [408]*408first trouble, he wanted to stop at the dining-room floor and could not, but slid to the basement at about full speed, breaking mirrors on each side of the car: on day of accident picked up a passenger on fifth floor, tried to stop at fourth, but brake did not act, worked controller to stop, and turned off the current without effect, and dropped five floors to the basement: on Saturday before accident had trouble with the car. It slid too much even without anybody in it but himself. After the accident, two cables were loose at the top of the car, hanging down, and later on the elevator man opened the controller box, and about two handfuls of copper dust fell out of the box.

A witness named James Luck testified that he worked at night on the Griswold House elevator in July, 1905; that it did not run the night following the accident to the plaintiff. It slid with him two or three days before the accident, slid from the second floor to the basement and went down with a bump. Reported this occurrence to the head clerk of the hotel.

A witness named Harry Byam was bell-boy at the hotel, and among other things it was his duty to run the elevator when it was necessary to relieve plaintiff. He operated it two or three times at intervals on the day of the accident, relieving the plaintiff for from five to fifteen minutes at a time. While coming down from the sixth floor with a passenger, he tried to stop at the dining-room floor, but the elevator would not stop and ran down to the basement, from whieh it had to be pushed up. Witness was in the car with plaintiff at the time of the accident, getting on at the fifth floor: noticed that the elevator was uncontrollable when the plaintiff tried to stop it at the fourth floor, throwing the lever back in position to stop the car, and then throwing it the other way and back up again, and then turning off the electricity, but the car went on down just the same as fast as it could go. After that the machinery was repaired. Witness saw them take part of the clutch on the pulley wheel apart, on top and underneath — the friction plate.

[409]*409Thomas West, an electrician, testified that he had been engaged in the business for 14 years; understood the construction of the Otis electric elevator; had been employed as electrician by the Public Lighting Commission and the Majestic Building. After qualifying as an expert witness, he was examined at length regarding the construction of electric elevators in general, and the one in which the accident occurred in particular; he having personally examined it. During his examination he demonstrated the construction and action of the brake and some other parts of the elevator on the blackboard before the jury. To a hypothetical question as to what condition would cause the car to drop, he said:

“ If the friction plate is not properly adjusted to allow the springs to work so that it will pull it up against the pulley, the weight of the car will have a tendency to overcome the friction on the pulley, and the car would slide. That is caused by improper adjustment of the largest nuts or the wearing out of the leather on the inside of the clutch. * * * Also, if the brake or clutch spring refused to work, and the car got to a speed sufficient to throw the clutch in on the bottom of the car, that would stop it. If the clutch did not work, or the brake did not work, it would show a defective covering of the clutch; a defective covering, or a defect in the clutch itself, or both.”

. In the examination of this witness the court took an active part, asking numerous leading and sometimes argumentative questions, to which counsel at times objected. During the examination of the witness as to what conditions might cause the accident, the following occurred:

The Court (continuing): Then either the car did not go fast enough to throw it out — just a moment — either the car did go fast enough to throw the governor out, or else there was no covering there, or it was out of repair ?
“A. Yes, sir.
The Court: One of those three conditions ?
“A. Yes, sir.
The Court: And you don’t know which one ?
“A. No, sir.
[410]*410“ The Court: Now, you see that is what I am trying to illustrate; it is speculation. * * *
“Juror: Can I ask a question ?
The Court: Yes.
Juror:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 N.W. 453, 168 Mich. 405, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammer-v-postal-mich-1912.