Bullock v. Butler Exchange Company

52 A. 122, 24 R.I. 50, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 A. 122 (Bullock v. Butler Exchange Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullock v. Butler Exchange Company, 52 A. 122, 24 R.I. 50, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 17 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Eogers, J.

This is an action of trespass on the case for injury alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant’s servant in operating a passenger elevator in the defendant’s building in Providence while transporting the plaintiff from the first to the fifth floor. After a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000, upon a jury trial, the defendant petitioned for a new trial upon the following grounds, viz.:

First. That the verdict is against the law and the evidence, and the weight thereof.

Second. That the presiding' justice erred in his charge to the jury, and especially in that portion thereof referring to the statutory requirements regarding elevators, and to which the defendant duly excepted.

Third. That the plaintiff, by her evidence, has entirely failed to support the acts of negligence complained of in her declaration.

Upon demurrer to both counts of the declaration this Division sustained the demurrer to the first and overruled the demurrer to the second count, upon which latter count alone, therefore, the jury trial was' had,

*52 This count is substantially described in the opinion sustaining it, on the trial of the demurrer (22 R. I. 105, 107), in this wise, viz.:

1 It sets out in substance that after the elevator had reached the fifth floor, and while the plaintiff was passing out of the elevator onto said floor (she having been invited to leave the elevator by the servant by opening the door after arriving at this floor), the defendant’s servant • caused the elevator to move upwards, whereby one of the plaintiff’s feet was caught between the floor of the elevator and the fifth floor of the building and injured. This count, as we understand it, alleges that the elevator had reached' the fifth floor or was so near to the level thereof that the passengers could easily and safely step out upon said floor; that the elevator had either absolutely or practically come to a standstill; that the door had been opened to enable the passengers to alight; and that while the plaintiff was stepping out, the elevator was started up again and the plaintiff’s foot caught as aforesaid.”

The plea was the general issue. The jui’y took a view and as the defendant offered no testimony the evidence was un-contradicted.

Inasmuch as the plaintiff and the boy who operated the elevator for the defendant, who at the time of the accident had only been in the defendant’s employ for three or four days, but who is still in its employ and might have been called by the defendant to testify at the jury trial, were the only occupants of the elevator on the trip when the accident occurred, and the latter was not called on to testify, the plaintiff was the sole witness of the accident whose statement we have, the other witnesses in the case being two assistants in the establishment she was on her way to, who heard her cries of pain and ran out and found her where she fell just outside the elevator, and some others who testified as to the nature of her injuries.

The testimony shows that the plaintiff, a woman of seventy years of age, was on her way to the rooms of Doctor Moore in the Butler Exchange, in Providence, for treatment; that *53 she got into the elevator on the first floor of that building to be transported to the fifth floor; that upon reaching that floor, or, rather, very near the level of it, the elevator stopped and the elevator boy opened the door so she could get out. The plaintiff describes the accident in this wise: “Q. 55. I want you to .tell us whether the elevator, stopped ? A. Oh yes, it stopped, I didn’t attempt to get out until I saw it was stopped and then I attempted to get out. Q. 56. Now then, was there a door to the elevator? A. The door the boy opened. I couldn’t get • out unless he opened the door. Q. 57. You hadn’t told us that before. You say the boy opened the door? A. Yes, and as I stepped out my foot caught — I mean as I went to step out I couldn’t move it, and I said ‘ You have my foot caught.’ • Q. 58. Did you feel that your foot was caught — as your foot was caught did you feel any motion of the elevator ? A. I felt something kind of rubbing my foot — the flesh there — I didn’t know that was what I felt. Q. 59. What noise did you make? A. I screamed like everything, it hurt me awfully. I though I was killed but I wasn’t. . . . Q. 174. When you started to walk out of that elevator can you tell the jury whether that elevator moved while you were in the act of walking out ? Can you tell them whether it did or not ? A. I think it moved. Q. 175. What makes you think so ? A. Because of the dragging sensation to my foot, I kind of hesitated thinking it would relieve the pressure, you know. . . . Cross-Examination. . . Q. 206. When was it you got your foot caught, by getting into the elevator ? A. When I was getting out. Q. 207. You say you asked him to move the elevator ? A. Yes sir, I think he would-say that, himself. Q. 208. Were you standing up at the time? A. Yes sir, I‘ was standing, but when he lowered it,down I went, I couldn’t stand on one foot. Q. 209. When he lowered the elevator then you fell out on the floor ? A. I don’t know as I fell out, because it wasn’t open then. ,Q. 210. It wasn’t open then? A. No. The Court. What wasn’t open? Q. 211.» You mean the elevator door wasn’t open ? A-. I couldn’t fall out unless it was open, could I ? Q. 212. Did you fall out or *54 down in the elevator ?' A. I fell down in the elevator because just as soon as I thought he lifted it up, down I went all of a sudden — let my foot out. Q. 213. When you went down all of a sudden was it in the elevator or out on the floor? A. I don’t know how it could be out on the floor. Q. 214. The elevator door was shut, was it ? A. I didn’t attempt to get out until it was open. As soon as he opened the door I attempted to get out. Q. 215. Where did you fall, on the elevator floor or on the floor of the hall of the building ? A. I think.it must have been inside I fell. Q. 216. The door wasn’t open then when you fell — the elevator door wasn’t open was it ? A. I couldn’t tell how I fell, but my foot was crushed so I couldn’t tell what was going on around me. Q. 21A You couldn’t tell us whether the door was open or shut ? A. I know it was open. You know I stood waiting for him to let it down. As soon as he opened the door — as soon as I didn’t see any motion I attempted to get out — as soon as he opened the door. Q. 218. You were standing there and asked him to drop the elevator down ? A. You know I went to step and my foot was caught and I couldn’t get out. Q. 219. You asked him to let the elevator down? A. Yes sir, he will remember that. Q. 220. When he let the elevator down then you fell ? A. Yes sir, my foot went right down. Q. 221. You wouldn’t tell us whether you fell inside or outside ? A. No sir, anybody wouldn’t be apt to remember if they were so crushed you know. ”

The witnesses' Poliquin and Gadbois, on hearing the plaintiff’s screams, immediately ran from Dr. Moore’s office and found her stretched out on the fifth floor just outside the ele-' vator, with her shoe badly torn and the heel thereof pulled off. On examining her foot, they found it was very badly bruised, and there was some blood on it and on her stocking. The top of the foot was very much bruised and the heel was getting black and so was the leg.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 122, 24 R.I. 50, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullock-v-butler-exchange-company-ri-1902.