Cumberland Brewing Co. v. Feldstein

106 A. 161, 134 Md. 42, 1919 Md. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 106 A. 161 (Cumberland Brewing Co. v. Feldstein) 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
Cumberland Brewing Co. v. Feldstein, 106 A. 161, 134 Md. 42, 1919 Md. LEXIS 43 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

*43 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought to recover for injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the servant or agent of the appellant.

Ln September, 1917, the appellant, the Cumberland Brewing Company of Allegany County, was conducting a brewery and. was also engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice, and owned and operated a large plant for that purpose in the City of Cumberland. It was the custom of the appellant to sell and deliver ice to customers who went to the plant to purchase it from a platform or porch on the Franklin street side of the plant, and the company employed agents or servants for that purpose. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon of September 14th the plaintiff, a hoy about 10 years, of age, was sent- by his mother to the appellant’s plant to purchase for her a piece of ice. She gave him a nickle with which to pay for the ice, and he took with him a two-wheel wagon or cart in which to carry the ice home. He was in the habit of going to the plant two or three times a week to get ice for his mother, and on the afternoon in question when he got to the plant he, as was his custom, backed his cart up to the platform to wait until the employees of the appellant could wait on him. When he first reached the plant two- young men, John Brodo and Happy Wisenmiller, were on the platform. John Brode was waiting on the customers, and he left and told Wisenmiller to wait on them. The plaintiff further testified that there was always someone on the platform to wait on the customers, and that lie generally purchased the ice from whomever happened to be there for that purpose; that after Wisenmiller waited on Lewis Baker, by placing a block of ice in his wagon, he asked the plaintiff if he wanted ice, and the plaintiff told Wisenmiller that he wanted a 5-eent piece of ice; that plaintiff’s cart was backed up against the platform; that there was a box about twenty inches square on the cart, and the tongue of the cart was about three feet long; that ho was standing with his right foot on the tongue to stop the cart from turning over when the ice was put- in the box; *44 that Wisenmiller placed the ice in his cart with ice tongs, and when he was drawing the ice tongs up the sharp part of the tongs struck him, the plaintiff, in his eye. Other evidence in the case shows that as a result of the injury the plaintiff’s eyeball was badly lacerated and his eye had to be removed five days after the accident.

Lewis Baker testified that he went to defendant’s plant every other day for ice; that “it was a regular sales place for selling ice. Johnnie Brode was the regular boy who waited on customers. When he wasn’t there I don’t know whn waited on customers. I have been waited on by Billie Eitzgerald and Shinholtz, whoi were employees of the brewery. I know Wisenmiller by name, and have seen him work at the defendant’s plant. He has been working there for some time, and I thick he worked in the bottling department. On the day that Abie Eeldstein was hurt, the 14th of September, 1917, I went to the plant for ice for my mother and took a wagon along and got the ice in it. ‘Happy’ Wisenmiller waited on me. Brode did not. When I got to the platform ‘Happy’ Wisenmiller was sitting on the platform, I think, or over there some place. I think he asked me whether I wanted ice, and I told him I wanted a niekle’s worth of ice. Then I think he went in the plant and got the ice. He cut it in there and pushed it out with his foot and lifted it in my wagon with the tongs. He was standing at about the middle of the platform when he lifted it in my wagon.”

Wisenmiller, who was called as a witness by the defendant, testified on cross-examination as follows: “I did jag the boy’s eye out with the ice tongs. I was putting that ice into his wagon as a favor because he asked me to—that- is the whole reason and there is mr other reason. It was a 50-pound piece and I did that merely because the boy asked me. I had never seen him before, and for that reason alone I was putting the 50-pound piece of ice in his wagon. That is the sole and only reason. I didn’t go to hit him.”

According to-the testimony adduced by the defendant, Wisenmiller was employed by the defendant in its “bottling *45 works,” and he “did not have any work for the defendant outside of the bottling house at any time, * * * except on occasions when they were shorthanded and had new men on the freight trucks. That is freight trucks—hauling beer and ice to freight cars.” Tie “never sold any ice from the platform and did not have any authority to sell or deliver ice from the platform.” Wisenmiller testified that on the day of the accident he finished his work at 5 o’clock in the evening, and that after he had been discharged for the day, and when he was leaving the defendant’s plant, he saw the plaintiff and Baker standing on the platform or porch; that plaintiff had a “pair of ice tongs in his hands wrestling with” a fifty-pound piece of ice and asked him (the witness) to lift it in his wagon, and that he took the tongs from the plaintiff “and took the ice and put it in his wagon for him.”

The trial of the case resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $2,500.00, .and this appeal is from the judgment on that verdict.

The only exception in the case is to the ruling of the Court below on the prayers, and in support of* that exception the contentions of the appellant in this Court, as stated in its brief, are:

“Eirst—There is no evidence in the case legally sufficient to show any negligence on the part of Wisenxniller; and
“Second—The evidence in the case shows that Wisenmiller, at the time of the injury, was not a servant of the defendant, and, if he were, he was not then acting within the scope of his employment.”

The defendant, as we have said, was engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice, and maintained a platform or porch from which its employee's or servants sold and delivered the ice to its customers. The plaintiff and other customers of the defendant were accustomed to purchase and receive delivery of their ice from whoever was on the platform to wait on them. It was the duty of the servants of the defendant in *46 delivering ice tó defendant’s customers, and in using ice tongs for that purpose, to exercise due care to avoid injury to them, and it is not denied that the defendant would be liable to them for any injury resulting from a neglect of that duty. The appellant insists that while the evidence shows the plaintiff was injured, there is nothing in the testimony of the plaintiff to show any act of negligence on the part of Wisenmiller who delivered the ice to him. It is true the plaintiff did not say that Wisenmiller carelessly ojr negligently swung the tongs towards him, but his testimony does indicate his position on the pavement to have been at least several feet from- the platform, and shows that the tongs were in the hands of Wisenmiller’ and under his control. There is nothing in the evidence to suggest that the plaintiff moved from the position indicated, or that any act of his contributed to the injury. On the contrary, Wisenmiller testified that he jagged the plaintiff’s eye out with the ice tongs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A. 161, 134 Md. 42, 1919 Md. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cumberland-brewing-co-v-feldstein-md-1919.