F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Davis

41 F.2d 342
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1930
Docket187
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 41 F.2d 342 (F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Davis, 41 F.2d 342 (10th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

The appellee, plaintiff below, recovered a judgment for injuries received from a fall down an elevator shaft in his employer’s place of business. Several errors are assigned.

I. It is claimed that there was error in the overruling of defendant’s special plea to the jurisdiction, which1 presented the proposition that the injury was compensable only under the Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the state of Oklahoma. The state compensation statute provides that the remedies therein provided for shall be exclusive in cases where the statute applies. The statute provides:

“Compensation provided for in this act shall be payable for injuries sustained by employees engaged in the following hazardous employments, to-wit: * * * waterworks, reduction works, elevators, dredges, smelters, powder works, * * * operation and repair of elevators in office buildings * * • ” C. O. S. 1921, § 7283.

The plaintiff was an employee of one of the Woolworth retail stores; a part of his duties was to operate an elevator which’ was used by the store exclusively for transporting freight between the floors of that part of the building occupied and used by the store. The third floor of the building consisted of living apartments; the first and second floors were occupied by the defendant’s store, except two front offices which were not connected with, nor occupied by, the defendant’s store.

The Supreme Court of Oklahoma has not been called upon to interpret this statute as far as it refers to “elevators.” It seems clear to us that the word “elevators” in the sentence “waterworks, reduction works, elevators, dredges, smelters, powder works” refers to grain elevators, or other “elevator” businesses, and not to the operation of an elevator in a building; if “elevators” referred to such vehicles, it would include passenger and freight elevators in mercantile, manufacturing, and office buildings. Such interpretation would render meaningless the subsequent limited sentence, “operation and repair of elevators in office buildings.” The Supreme Court of Washington has construed a similar statute accordingly. Guerrieri v. Industrial Ins. Commission, 84 Wash. 266, 146 P. 608.

Nor was the plaintiff engaged in the “operation and repair of elevators in office buildings,” for the simple reason that this .was not an “office building”; it was a retail store, and the presence of the disconnected office on the second floor does not change its character. The special plea to the jurisdiction was properly overruled.

II. Error is assigned for failure to instruct a verdict because of the unreasonableness of plaintiff’s version of the accident, and because plaintiff failed to show that his injuries were the result of his fall. Plaintiff testified that it was his duty to open a window on the far side of the elevator shaft on the second floor. Because the gate guarding the shaft was up, he assumed the elevator was at the floor, and started to walk across the elevator to open the window; the elevator was not there, and he fell about eighteen feet, striking a girder about two-thirds of the way down. There was evidence that his body fell out of the shaft, his head toppling back onto the floor of the elevator; that the *345 floor of the elevator was covered with cartons, glassware, and other fragile material, which was not broken. There was also evidence that immediately after the accident, the window in the elevator shaft, which plaintiff started to open, was open. Plaintiff himself testified that often when he started to open the window when the elevator was at the ground floor he would swing or muscle himself across the shaft and open the window, to save himself the trouble of walking down to bring the elevator up. Defendant’s argument on this point is not entirely clear, hut we take it that its position is that the window being open immediately after the accident, the plaintiff must have opened it; that, if plaintiff had stepped into the elevator shaft, as he says, his body would have been inside the shaft and would have broken the glassware on the floor of the elevator; that, since windows do not open themselves, and falling bodies do not follow the arc of a semicircle, the evidence shows beyond dispute that plaintiff swung across the shaft, opened the window, slipped as he swung hack, which would project his body out of the shaft and into the position in which it was found. While this“theory does fit snugly into the admitted facts, and does accord with the fact that ordinarily men do not step blindly into open elevator shafts, and while such evidence would fully justify a verdict for the defendant, we cannot say that plaintiff’s version is impossible, or that the jury could not believe him. Some one else may have opened the window; the girder may have so deflected his fall as to throw his body out of the shaft. The jury’s finding concludes this question.

And so of the elaim that his present injury — a paralyzed right leg — was not the result of the accident. Immediately after the fall, the doctors discovered no such injury; several days under observation in the hospital developed none. Shortly after his discharge from the hospital he was afflicted with appendicitis; after appendectomy, the motor, but not the sensory, nerve of the right leg was paralyzed. The doetors disagreed as to whether the injury could bo traced back to the fall. The plaintiff testified that, upon manipulation immediately after the fall, the right leg pained him. This again was for the jtoy.

III. Error is assigned because the plaintiff, in his testimony, got before the jury the suggestion that the defendant carried insuranee against such accidents. The testimony complained of was volunteered. Plaintiff’s counsel argues that such voluntary statemente are unavoidable, and that there was no motion to withdraw them from the jury’s consideration, and no motion to discharge the jury. Where irrelevant and prejudicial matters are injected into a jury trial, a formal withdrawal ordinarily does no good; an objection, in fact, ordinarily serves but for emphasis. If counsel should inquire whether the defendant is insured, or by other means implant the suggestion with the jury, ordinarily the harm has been done, although circumstances may exist where the eourt, by vigorous effort, may undo the damage, There is conflict in the decisions of the courts as to whether the dragging in of such irrelevant matters is reversible error. The followjng eases hold, or state, that it is: Yoast v. Sims, 122 Okl. 200, 253 P. 504; Birch v. Abercrombie, 74 Wash. 486, 133 P. 1020, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 59; Coe v. Van Why, 33 Colo. 315, 80 P. 894, 3 Ann. Cas. 552; Coon v. Manley (Tex. Civ. App.) 196 S. W. 606; Martin v. Lilly, 188 Ind. 139, 121 N. E. 443; Sawyer v. Arnold Shoe Co., 90 Me. 369, 38 A. 333; Kerr v. Brass Mfg. Co., 155 Mich, 191, 38 N. W. 925; Cosselmon v. Dunfee, 172 N. Y. 507, 65 N. E. 494; Prewitt-Spurr Mfg. Co. v. Woodall, 115 Tenn. 605, 90 S. W. 623; Tremblay v. Harnden, 162 Mass. 383, 38 N. E. 972; Walters v. Appalachian Power Co., 75 W. Va. 676, 84 S. E. 617; Hollis v. United States Glass Co., 220 Pa. 49, 69 A. 55; Standridge v. Martin, 203 Ala. 486, 84 So. 266; Stanley v. Whiteville Lbr. Co., 184 N. C. 302, 114 S. E. 385. To the contrary, see Robinson v. Woolworth Co., 80 Mont. 431, 261 P. 253; Howard v. Marshall Motor Co., 106 Kan. 775, 190 P. 11; Jessup v. Davis, 115 Neb. 1, 211 N. W. 190, 56 A. L. R. 1403; Wells v. Morrison, 121 Or. 604, 256 P. 641 the facte came before the jury incedentally, but

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41 F.2d 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-w-woolworth-co-v-davis-ca10-1930.