Carlson v. Associated Realty Corporation

159 A. 885, 114 Conn. 699, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 26, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 159 A. 885 (Carlson v. Associated Realty Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlson v. Associated Realty Corporation, 159 A. 885, 114 Conn. 699, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 88 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Banks, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff to recover for personal injuries suffered by reason of falling into an elevator well in a building owned by the defendant. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff, to whom it awarded damages in the sum of $17,000. The court granted the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict unless the plaintiff entered a remittitur of $3000, which was done. The defendant appeals from the refusal of the court to set. aside the verdict absolutely, and also assigns error in the charge and the refusal to charge as requested, and in certain rulings on evidence.

The defendant did not itself conduct business in the building in which the plaintiff was injured, but leased space in it to a large number of tenants. In the center of the building was a large space known as the loading room which contained two loading slips, each about fifteen feet wide and thirty-nine feet long, which were on the ground level, the floor of the building being raised about four and a half feet above them so that motor trucks could be conveniently unloaded while standing in the slips. The loading slips were on the north side of the building, immediately south of these, was a platform about seven feet wide which was used as an unloading platform and also as a passageway through the building, and south of the passageway was *702 a freight elevator. The passageway was used in common by the tenants of the building, who also had the free use of the elevator, the power for which was furnished by the defendant. On the easterly and westerly sides of the elevator were folding wire gates which, if both the gates and the elevator were working properly and not interfered with, would remain open when the elevator was opposite the first floor, and would close when it left the floor. The plaintiff was employed in a building owned by the defendant adjoining and connected with that in which he was injured, and rented from it the room which he occupied in that building, either for himself or on behalf of his employer. When he rented the room the defendant’s renting agent showed him how access could be had to it by passing through the loading room of the other building along the passageway between the loading slips and the freight elevator. While on his way to his room along this passageway the plaintiff turned to his left to avoid an object in the passageway, which he described as some pieces of beaver-board and other witnesses as corrugated cardboard, and fell through the open and unguarded elevator shaft receiving serious injuries.

The facts thus far stated were substantially undisputed. The plaintiff was an invitee of the defendant, which owed him the duty to use reasonable care to keep this common passageway in its building reasonably safe. Werebeychick v. Morris Land & Development Co., Inc., 108 Conn. 226, 142 Atl. 739.

The complaint alleged that the defendant was negligent in two respects, (1) in failing to provide proper and adequate lighting at the entrance of the elevator . shaft, and (2) in leaving the opening of the shaft uncovered and unprotected. The defendant contends that the plaintiff knew of the presence of the elevator, that it was in plain view as he came along the passage *703 way, and that his fall was due to his own negligence in failing to make use of his senses. It appeared from the plaintiff’s own testimony that on a few occasions prior to the accident he had passed along the passageway by the elevator, and the means of access to his own room shown him by the defendant’s renting agent was along this passageway. He testified that the renting agent did not point out the elevator to him, and that he did not know that there was an elevator shaft there. There was a sharp conflict of evidence as to thé light conditions at the entrance to the elevator shaft at the time of the accident which occurred on August 4th shortly after seven a. m. Eastern Standard time. There was evidence that the loading room was very poorly lighted, that there were no windows within thirty-eight feet of the elevator shaft, that the doors of the loading slips, which were forty-six feet away from the elevator shaft, were only partly open, and such light as came through them was from a courtyard entirely surrounded by brick buildings, that the floor of the room was dark and the hole of the elevator shaft looked the same as the floor surrounding it. The plaintiff was entitled to assume' that due care had been used not to expose him to danger from such a cause, and until something indicated to him the possibility of such danger, it was not incumbent upon him as a matter of law to exercise special precautions. Whether or not he was guilty of contributory negligence presented a fair question of fact for the jury. Werebeychick v. Morris Land & Development Co., Inc., supra; Bunnell v. Waterbury Hospital, 103 Conn. 520, 525, 131 Atl. 501.

The defendant contends that it cannot be held responsible for the plaintiff’s injuries since the control and operation of the elevator was solely in the hands of its tenants, and that it was the act of one of them, *704 or of some unauthorized third person, in fastening the gate open that was the proximate cause of the accident. The defendant furnished the motive power for the elevator, its janitor used it for the defendant’s purposes whenever occasion arose, and the jury would have been fully justified in finding that the defendant had not completely relinquished the control and operation of the elevator to the tenants of the building. Moreover, the defendant’s contention that it owed the plaintiff no duty in respect to the operation of the elevator is quite beside the mark, since the plaintiff’s cause of action is not based upon negligence in the operation of the elevator, but upon the failure of the defendant to keep its premises reasonably safe for use.

As already stated, the elevator gates, if working properly and not interfered with, would remain open when the elevator was opposite the first floor, but would close when the elevator was moved. At the time of the plaintiff’s fall the elevator was somewhere in the upper part of the building, and the wire gate was held open by a stick which had been inserted under it to keep it from automatically closing. The defendant contends that the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s fall was the fastening open of the gate, which was not done by the defendant’s servants or agents. If this were all of the evidence as to the responsibility for the open elevator shaft, there would be force in the defendant’s claim that it could not be held liable for the unanticipated and unauthorized act of some third person over whom it had no control. There was, however, testimony that, for some time prior to the accident, when the elevator was stopped at the first floor it would not remain stationary but would creep up or down, and the gates would close. A stick placed under the gate would hold it open, and the defendant’s night watchman testified that on various occasions he *705 would find the gate held open by a stick, as it was upon the occasion of the plaintiff’s fall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 A. 885, 114 Conn. 699, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlson-v-associated-realty-corporation-conn-1932.