Connelly v. Kaufmann & Baer Co.

37 A.2d 125, 349 Pa. 261
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 24, 1944
DocketAppeals, 89 and 90
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 125 (Connelly v. Kaufmann & Baer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connelly v. Kaufmann & Baer Co., 37 A.2d 125, 349 Pa. 261 (Pa. 1944).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

Defendant appeals from judgments on verdicts in favor of a parent, suing in his own behalf and on behalf of his minor child, for injuries sustained by the minor on an escalator in defendant’s store in Pittsburgh.

The minor, at the time of injury, was three years and tAvo months old and was in the custody of his mother. She had made several purchases and, according to her testimony, was on a descending escalator holding the boy’s left hand as he stood beside her. She testified that as she stepped from the escalator, at the first floor, the child’s hand “slipped” from hers “and he fell face forAvard to the floor.” She did not know what caused his *263 hand to slip from hers; she said, “Well, he fell and his hand was caught on the escalator step right at the floor.” “He was on the floor on his knee” but “no part of him [was] on the escalator steps.” His “finger had been wedged in too, between these prongs” referring to the comb at the floor level where the steps of the escalator move under the floor. She called for help and, while her testimony varies, she states that “approximately five minutes” passed before the escalator was stopped. Her testimony is that the escalator was then reversed, the child was picked up and taken to the hospital in the store where his wound was treated; that from five to seven minutes elapsed between her first call for help and the time the child was picked up.

The statement of claim averred that the boy and his mother descended on the escalator and “. . . when they had reached the bottom of the Escalator where it passes through the first floor, by reason of its reckless, careless, and negligent construction, the minor plaintiff, Donald E. Connelly, was caused to fall and by reason of the recklessness, carelessness and negligence of the defendant in failing to provide or to give notices to the public generally or its servants, agents or employees of a method of shutting off or stopping the movement of the Escalator, the minor plaintiff sustained serious injuries . . .”

The escalator was an elevator. The minor and his mother were passengers on it and were entitled to the measure of care due by a carrier of passengers to persons lawfully riding: compare Petrie v. Kaufmann & Baer Co., 291 Pa. 211, 139 A. 878; Strobel v. Park, 292 Pa. 200, 140 A. 877. No breach of that duty appears. There was no attempt to show that the escalator was defectively constructed. The only possible inference from the mother’s evidence of the child’s fall, as she was alighting, is that it was purely accidental. For the results of the accident, defendant, without negligence, is not liable. Plaintiffs recognized this and tried the case *264 on the issue formed hy the following averment, “(e) They [defendant] failed to bring the Escalator to a stop when through their servants, agents and employees they had notice that an emergency had arisen and that it was necessary to bring the Escalator to a stop immediately.”

The effect of plaintiffs’ admissions (1) that the escalator was properly constructed and (2) that defendant was not liable for the injury resulting from the accident (i.e., the child’s fall at the comb plate) was to impose on plaintiffs the burden of separating the effect of that injury from the effect of the injury alleged to have been sustained after the defendant had failed to stop the escalator in a reasonable time. 1 Defendant relied on the evidence showing that the escalator had been stopped within a reasonable time and contended there was no tort.

The learned trial judge instructed the jury as follows : “In this case the plaintiffs contend that the negligence was a failure of the defendant to take reasonable precaution for the safety of this youngster after his peril had been discovered, and you have to determine whether or not it did. Now let me get this straight with you. The mere fact that an accident happened is not proof of negligence, nor in this case is the fact that the boy had his middle finger in the comb of that escalator proof of negligence. There is no claim here that the boy’s finger got into that comb through any fault of the defendant, and that is particularly important that you keep that in mind. The negligence of the defendant as alleged by the plaintiffs in this case is that the boy’s finger, having been caught in- that comb, and the mother trying to keep the rest of the boy’s hand out, giving notice that the accident had happened, the employees of the store failed to use reasonable care in turning that escalator off so that when she grew faint after a time the boy’s hand went into the moving part between the tread and the comb, as *265 I understand the plaintiffs’ theory, and so you must start with the situation that the boy’s middle finger is caught in the comb and from that situation, just for our purposes, the fault of nobody, determine whether or not from that point on the defendant was negligent in failing to exercise reasonable care in preventing further accident and further harm to that boy.”

The rule of law is clear. The mother and child were business visitors to whom the defendant owed the duty of keeping its premises reasonably safe or giving warning of any failure so to maintain them: Kulka v. Nemirovsky, 314 Pa. 134, 170 A. 261, and cases referred to on page 139; Burckhalter v. F. W. Woolworth Co., 340 Pa. 300, 304, 16 A.2d 716; Mills v. Lit Brothers, 347 Pa. 174, 32 A.2d 10. That duty was performed as appears by plaintiffs’ abandonment of any claim for liability for the injury resulting from what we have referred to as the accident. The performance of defendant’s duty required something more than merely furnishing a proper escalator; it was also necessary to see that it was operated with due regard for the reasonable safety of such persons as should be expected to be brought in contact with it. The proper management of such operation necessarily involved stopping the machine if emergency required. The minor’s accidental predicament created the emergency. The first notice of it was the mother’s warning. It then became the defendant’s duty to do what was reasonably necessary in the operation of the machine to save the minor from additional injury, and if necessary, to stop the escalator. It could be stopped by pressing a button on the end of it at the floor where the mother stepped from the escalator or at the floor from which she descended. Defendant’s duty to the minor as a business visitor 2 required defendant to release him from the con *266 tinuing effect of the moving machine, after having a reasonable time in which to stop it: compare Frederick v. Phila. R. T. Co., 337 Pa. 136 10 A.2d 576. Was it stopped in a reasonable time? If it was, plaintiffs have no case because the injury was purely accidental.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 125, 349 Pa. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connelly-v-kaufmann-baer-co-pa-1944.