Brandenberg v. Equity Co-Operative Exchange

199 N.W. 570, 160 Minn. 162, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 717
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 18, 1924
DocketNo. 23,972
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 N.W. 570 (Brandenberg v. Equity Co-Operative Exchange) 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
Brandenberg v. Equity Co-Operative Exchange, 199 N.W. 570, 160 Minn. 162, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 717 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Holt, J.

The appeal is from an order denying defendant’s motion in the alternative for judgment non obstante or a new trial, after verdict for plaintiff.

The action is by the father in behalf of his son, Paul, a minor, to recover for injuries sustained by Paul when a manlift in defendant’s grain elevator at Sanborn, North Dakota, fell with him. The recovery was based on the theory that the lift was an attractive and dangerous plaything for children and also that defendant’s manager, Ferhagen, in charge of the elevator, negligently permitted children to operate the same, knowing it to be dangerous and out of repair.

[164]*164The grain elevator is of the ordinary type common to small villages. A covered driveway with doors leads to the scale and unloading platform. On one side of the driveway is the office, on the other the. cleaning room and elevator proper, where, about 2 feet from the unloading platform, is the manlift, its floor when fastened down being about 6 inches above that of the main elevator floor. The floor of the lift is about 3 feet square. No railing or cage surrounds it. Bolted to the floor frame upon two of its opposite sides are four 8-foot 2x4 posts, each post being fastened about one foot from the corner of the floor. At the top of the post is a horizontal beam 3 feet long. To this beam the posts are bolted. The beam being only about 4 or 6 inches thick, the posts, which stand about 2 feet apart at the floor, incline towards the beam. A heavy rope, attached to the center of the beam passes over a pulley at the top of the elevator and is fastened to a boxed-in counterweight, heavy enough to raise the lift with a large man thereon. This counterweight is the motive power. A smaller rope fastened at the top and bottom of the elevator, passing through holes in the beam and floor of the lift, is used to start the lift, especially if the load is about as heavy as the counterweight. When the lift is at rest on the elevator floor it is held down by a spring board which hooks over an edge of the floor of the lift, the lower end of the board being bolted to beams under the floor of the elevator. Near the ends of the beam of the lift as well as near the floor thereof are grooves into which fit the uprights or guides running from the bottom of the elevator to the top. From the floor of the lift a bolt projects about 2 inches upward. This, operates a brake which holds the lift securely to the guides. To move the lift the operator must step on this bolt and at the same time, with the other foot, kick or push off the spring board hook, and give the small rope a pull. Taking the foot off the bolt at once sets the brake and stops the lift. There is also a safety device near the beam designed to operate in case the rope attached to the counterweight parts. This device was out of order at the time Paul was injured. The lift does not run in a shaft. It is open on all sides to the top, 51 feet, where it passes through a floor opening. From [165]*165this description it should appear that there is nothing to protect a person, riding on the lift, from falling off in case of a sudden jar except by holding onto the posts mentioned.

Paul was 13 years and 4J months old when the accident happened. A boy 2 years younger lived with Ferhagen and at times assisted him with work. Of course, his presence drew other boys to the elevator, among them Paul and his younger brother. On the day in question the Ferhagen boy, Paul, and his brother had met, and when near the elevator started running towards it. Paul, in the lead, ran into the elevator, jumped on the lift and started it. His weight being light, the lift went up with such speed that it struck the bumper at the top with such force that the large rope attached to the counterweight broke, and, the .safety device above mentioned being out of repair, the lift fell. In the fall Paul was injured. As to the above facts there is no dispute.

The jury could also find from the evidence that defendant’s manager, Ferhagen, knew that the boys frequently used the lift in play; that he knew it was extremely dangerous for them to do so; and that, nevertheless, he did not object to such use, provided no teams were in the driveway to be frightened. In fact, Paul testified that Ferhagen sent him up once to oil some bearings at the top of the elevator, and we do not find that fact denied. To be sure, there is testimony from Ferhagen that the only two or three times he found the boys tampering with the lift he told them not to do so or they would be hurt, but this did not conclude the jury, even though it seems to us the inference from the boys’ testimony is quite strong that they knew the lift was forbidden them.

Error is assigned because the court permitted the reception of evidence relating to the construction and condition of the lift and its safety appliances before the introduction of proof tending to show defendant’s responsibility towards the injured boy. This was a mere matter of order of proof and within the discretion of the trial court. There was no impropriety in showing that Paul had done some little work in the elevator 3 or 4 weeks previous to the accident. Nor was there error in refusing to strike out, as not within the issues, the testimony of Paul that his purpose [166]*166in going to the elevator when the injury occurred was to get pay for work he had recently done. The complaint alleged that. he came to the elevator with the knowledge and consent of defendant. Under this allegation, evidence from which an implied invitation might he found was properly received.

The next contention argued by defendant is that it was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor. We need not consider the refusal to dismiss the case when plaintiff rested, because that ruling should not result in a reversal, if there was no error in denying the motion for a directed verdict. Defendant maintains that the doctrine of the “turntable cases” does not carry the instant case to the jury. It is said the lift was in a building and not in the open to attract children as in Keffe v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. 21 Minn. 207, 18 Am. St. 393; Twist v. Winona & St. Peter R. Co. 39 Minn. 164, 39 N. W. 402, 12 Am. St. 626; O’Malley v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. 43 Minn. 289, 45 N. W. 440; Berg v. B. B. Fuel Co. 122 Minn. 323, 142 N. W. 321.

Had this lift stood in the open adjacent to a street there could be no question as to its being an attractive and dangerous nuisance to children. But the jury were justified in finding that its location in this elevator, adjacent to a driveway generally open, was as accessible to the playmates of the Ferhagen boy as if it had stood outside. While the doctrine of the turntable cases is specially applicable where the attractive nuisances and dangerous appliances are upon public streets, as stated in Znidersich v. Minnesota Utilities Co. 155 Minn. 293, 193 N. W. 449, it does not necessarily depend upon whether the dangerous instrumentality is kept in a building or outside, but rather upon its attractiveness and easy accessibility to children. The main basis for a recovery here under the turnable doctrine was the negligence the jury could find in permitting the boys to make use of this admittedly dangerous lift. It was that conduct which made it as free and accessible to the boys as if it had stood in the street, and not any requirement that where it was it should have been so fastened that boys could not start it. In a business where machines or other mechanical appliances are operated, it is not feasible to keep them under lock and key. We [167]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 N.W. 570, 160 Minn. 162, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandenberg-v-equity-co-operative-exchange-minn-1924.