Beier v. Aberdeen Hotel Co.

136 N.W. 757, 118 Minn. 237, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1912
DocketNos. 17,664—(130)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 N.W. 757 (Beier v. Aberdeen Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beier v. Aberdeen Hotel Co., 136 N.W. 757, 118 Minn. 237, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 568 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Plaintiff sued the defendants, claiming damages because of ‘injuries suffered through their negligence. A verdict was rendered against both defendants. Each appeals from an order denying its separate motion that judgment be rendered in its favor notwithstanding the verdict, or, in case of a denial thereof, that a new trial be had.

The material facts appear to be these:

[239]*239The defendant Hotel Company, a corporation, operates a hotel called the Aberdeen in the city of St. Paul. It is more than eight stories high. A passenger elevator, the door of which opens to the north, is located near the northerly wall of the building. The stairway leading from one floor to another is set against the south and east sides of the elevator shaft. The cage is about eight feet square, and is run on two guideposts set in the center of the east and west sides of the shaft. The shaft is protected by ornamental iron lattice or scrollwork sufficiently open so that the elevator may be seen as it passes up and down, and also so that the guideposts and whatever may be fastened to them may be observed. This scrollwork does not go clear from floor to ceiling, but by stepping up about six steps from the bottom of the stairway a person is in a position where he may'place his head over the scrollwork and look into the shaft.

The defendant Telephone Company, a corporation, was employed' to install two telephones in the hotel, and for that purpose, on the morning of November 4, 1910, sent one Boland, a foreman, and plaintiff, a helper, to do the work. Attached to the west guidepost in the shaft was a box some eight feet from the sixth floor, where were contained main wires with which the telephones to be installed had to be connected. This was to be done by one of the men standing on the top of the elevator cage, then passing the wires from the box inside the shaft along the guidepost through screw eyes inserted therein.

When plaintiff and Boland at about 9 :30 a. m. got off from the elevator at the sixth floor with their wires and tools, and 'Boland had inspected the box on the guidepost, he called the elevator and directed the operator to lower it, so that the top thereof would be even with the sixth floor. This was done, and plaintiff was about to step in on the top of the cage to string the wires, when a guest of the hotel approached, saying, “Going down.” Boland then directed the operator to come up for the guest. In the meantime two ladies on the seventh floor signaled for the elevator, and instead of taking the first party down the elevator went up to the seventh floor for these ladies. One of these was feeble, and it took a little time for them to get in. Boland and plaintiff took no notice of the move[240]*240ments of the car, but plaintiff claims that he supposed it went down. Boland, however, started up the stairway some seven or more steps for the purpose, as he claims, of showing plaintiff the location of a screw eye on the west guidepost about a foot below the sixth floor through which he was to string the wires.

Plaintiff contends that this occurred: As the guest of the hotel approached the elevator, saying, “Going down,” Boland said, “Let him take him (referring to the guest) down first,” and called the operator up, and, as the guest stepped in the elevator, Boland said to plaintiff, “Come around: I want to show you something,” and to the elevator operator, “Look out; we would be working there,” and the operator responded, “All right.” That thereupon Boland started up the stairway, followed by plaintiff, and when Boland got up some nine steps, standing three or four steps higher than plaintiff, he directed the latter to put his head over the scrollwork and notice the screw eye on the post. That plaintiff obeyed, and as he did so the elevator came down and he was caught, receiving severe injuries to his head.

Boland admits he told the elevator operator to take the guest down, and that he went up the stairway to show plaintiff the screw eye, but denies that he directed plaintiff to put his head in the shaft, or knew that plaintiff so intended, or in fact did, till he. heard the outcry.

Plaintiff predicates his right to recover against the BEotel Company on the proposition that the elevator operator was requested to look out for the men when he came back, as plaintiff and Boland were to work about the shaft; that he promised so to do, but negligently, in view of what occurred, brought the car up to the seventh floor, and then ran it down without warning. And as to the Telephone Company, the claim is that Boland was a vice principal, and negligently directed plaintiff to place his head in a place of danger without taking precautions to ascertain where the elevator then was.

Each defendant made a separate motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and, in case of a denial thereof, that the verdict [241]*241be set aside and a new trial awarded. The motions were denied in all things, and each defendant appeals.

Both defendants insist that contributory negligence conclusively appears, and also that plaintiff assumed the risk. We are not prepared to say as a matter of law that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, or assumed the risk of injury, if he understood from what occurred that the elevator started down with the guest, that the operator was informed and understood that plaintiff and Boland were to work in such a position that it was unsafe unless the operator looked out for them in running the elevator past the sixth floor, and if ordinary care on plaintiff’s part did not charge him with knowledge that the elevator went up and not down. But this is true only upon the assumption that the conversation took place between Boland and the elevator operator as contended by plaintiff.

As we read the record and the instructions of the trial court to the jury, we are of the opinion that the defendant Telephone Company was and is entitled to judgment in its favor. We may assume for the purposes of this decision that if Boland directed plaintiff to put his head in the elevator shaft it was the direction of the Telephone Company, and if there was negligence in giving such direction it was the master’s negligence. The trial court so charged the jury. The court at the request of the Telephone Company instructed the jury that: “If you find, however, that a promise was made on the part of an employee of the Aberdeen Hotel Company to warn Boland and Beier of the return of the elevator, then and in that case you are instructed that Boland was equally entitled to rely upon that warning, and no recovery can be had against the defendant the Northwestern Telephone Exchange Company for any injury resulting from failure to give such warning.”

We are of the opinion that this is a correct view of the law upon the facts, and no more favorable to the defendant Telephone Company than it had a right to demand. Plaintiff observed the elevator and its movements as well as Boland. He saw and heard everything that occurred, just the same as Boland did; hence, if plaintiff might rely on the conversation had with the elevator operator, so might Boland. Hnder this instruction the jury must have found that [242]*242plaintiff’s version of the conversation between Boland and the elevator boy was not true, because, if true, a verdict should have been rendered in its favor.

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Bluebook (online)
136 N.W. 757, 118 Minn. 237, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beier-v-aberdeen-hotel-co-minn-1912.