Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co. v. Green

113 A. 103, 137 Md. 503, 1921 Md. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 A. 103 (Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co. v. Green, 113 A. 103, 137 Md. 503, 1921 Md. LEXIS 33 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

Oscar G. Green, the appellee in this case, was severely injured while attempting to signal one of the elevators of the appellant in the Lexington Street Office Building on November 8th, 1919.

The building had not been quite completed, but elevators had been installed, and were being used for the purpose of conveying materials, workmen and prospective tenants of the offices to and from the upper floors, of which there were twenty-one. There are eight passenger elevators, four on the east and four on the west side of the corridor leading from the Lexington Street entrance. There wasi one open well on each sido in which the four elevators ran, with the necessary steel framing to give each elevator its own shaft, but not enough to enclose the shaft, or screen one from the other. Nos. 7 and 8 adjoined each other and were on the east side of the corridor.

No call bells had been attached, or signals of any kind, to enable those wishing to use the elevators to attract the attention of those operating the elevators', but gongs had been placed in the elevator to warn those working in and about the elevator shafts when the elevators were being, or about to be, moved. The primary purpose of the gongs was to warn workmen at the bottom of the shafts who were engaged in tiling the ground floors. It was thei duty of the elevator boys to ring these gongs before starting1 the elevators, and intermittently while they were in motion. The speed capacity of these elevators was about seven hundred feet a minute. *506 For some time after the installation of the elevators they were raised and lowered by what axe known as hoisting cables, but later a system known as compensating’ cables was introduced. Just when the change was made is one of the questions as to which there is a conflict of testimony. Appellee was president of the Agus Shade Carrier Company, which had the contract to supply shades for the windows. In connection with this work it was necessary for him to visit the building frequently and to use the elevators in going from floor to -floor. At the request of Alexander B. Evans, manager of the building for appellant, an appointment bad been made for a meeting at the building on the morning of the accident, and on his way to> meet the engagement appellee met Evans on the street and was told by him that it was impossible for him to turn back then as he had an important meeting requiring immediate attention, and was requested to proceed to the building and look after matters there on which appellee’s men were employed. He arrived there between twelve and half past twelve o’clock, took the elevator known as No. 7, and was carried to the seventeenth floor. It being dinner hour, he did not find his men at work, but inspected what they had been doing, and then went to elevator No. 7 intending to return, to Ms office. This was between twelve o’clock and twelve-thirty. What then happened, as testified to by appellee, was as follows: “It was lunch hour; the building was comparatively silent; that is, ¿t was possibly the most silent hour of the day when there was work going on. I went up to the elevator shaft, made the usual alarms, rattling the door; they were all more or less loose in there and the iron not having been fastened up> securely, and the tracks not straight, so you could make a little fuss rattling the doors; whistled and called ‘17th floor’ or ‘Bring your elevator,’ or something of that kind, trying to attract Ms attention. Then not having any response or not hearing the elevator, the cables in front of me being apparently stationary, I could not notice any movement of them, I walked *507 down to the extreme south end of the building and retraced my steps after glancing out of the window, killing* time waiting for the car.”

It appears from the record that No. 8 elevator, adjoining No. 7, was at that particular time not being used, although it was then operated interchangeably with No. 7.

The witness was asked why he didn’t call down the shaft at the point where the elevator was not then running. He answered: “The door was open, and there was more or less debris around on the floor, and I did not want to expose myself by taking a chance on falling in an open place. The other part was kind of a cage; there was nothing but the square openings, and I could put my head through, and if a foot did slip I would fall up against the other and not down the shaft.” “I think there was quite a bit of sand, which shifts badly under your feet.” (The witness had previously testified that the door was in place at No. 7, but the glass had not been put in.)

Describing his return to No. 7 after walking to the window', witness said: “I walked to the entrance door and rattled the door and called, and then, not getting: any response and having in mind that I had been there before and had walked down to the door, and all, and sufficient time had elapsed for the boy to come up had he heard me at all or had he been willing to respond; and, seeing the cables hanging and being positive in my mind that those were the hoisting cables, to mv knowledge there not having been any cables placed underneath the car, and knowing from having taken the matter up in person with Mr. Evans and with the foreman of the elevator company, '* * * then I walked to the extreme right of the entrance” and “placed my head through one of the doors.” “I put my head through in this position, just enough to get my mouth over so my voice would carry down, and the minute — just as I did that I saw nothing but the bottom of the shaft; there was no car down there, as I had every reason to suppose and believe was there; there was nothing *508 but the bottom of the shaft.” “I immediately jerked my head back to get it out.” “Just as I did the elevator tapped me on the back of the head.” “Q. A descending elevator? A. Yes; a descending elevator. Q. Where was the elevator when you put your head in ? A. It was above me, on either the 18th or 19th or 20th floors, I don’t know which one, but it was above instead of below. Q. Did you hear it coming? A. No, sir; you could not hear those cars coming; they were noiseless. Q. Did you hear any bell rung? A. No, sir; that is the reason of my having to put my head through the door. There was no bell rung. When I first went there I listened, and when I went back the second time I listened for the bell. Q. You were listening for the bell? A. Yes, sir; I was listening for the bell at the time I made these alarms and shaking the door and calling and whistling. Q. The building was comparatively quiet, yoii say? A. Yes. Q. You know that there was no bell rung? A. Yes; there was positively no bell rung while I was at the elevator.”

The testimony of both appellee and of Mr. Evans, who was then the manager of appellant’s building, was that the compensating cables had been put on elevator No. 7 just before the accident. Appellee testified that a few days before the accident, in conversation between appellee and the foreman in charge of the erection of the elevators, at which Evans was present, the foreman said it might be several days longer before he could get No. 7 equipped with compensating cables, a week or such a matter. Evans’ version of the foreman’s statement was that he said “he would try to give us the car some time soon. * * * He did not specify a week or ten days, or did not specify one day.”

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 103, 137 Md. 503, 1921 Md. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-gas-electric-light-power-co-v-green-md-1921.