Gabriel v. A. J. Smith Construction Co.

173 N.W. 195, 206 Mich. 471, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 681
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1919
DocketDocket No. 90
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 N.W. 195 (Gabriel v. A. J. Smith Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabriel v. A. J. Smith Construction Co., 173 N.W. 195, 206 Mich. 471, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 681 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Mike Gabriel, son of plaintiff, met his death on May 23, 1917, by falling down the shaft of a temporary skeleton elevator at a high building called the Fort Shelby hotel, then in process of construction at the corner of First street and Lafayette boulevard in the city of Detroit. The A. J. Smith Construction Company was engaged as contractor in the erection of this building, and deceased was employed by it as a water boy. He was 16 years of age, of Italian parentage, and was paid $2 per day of 10 hours. His work consisted of obtaining and carrying drinking water to the men working upon the building wherever they might be. He had been steadily so employed for about a month before his death.

The structure of the incompleted building had been carried up eight stories at the time of the accident. A temporary elevator or material hoist stood about four feet from the building, the shaft being of an open, skeleton design constructed of wooden uprights braced and strengthened by cross-pieces in an “X” form, having from each floor of the building an open landing platform or passageway of boards or plank reaching across the intervening four feet to the shaft by which the hoisted material was taken from the elevator into the building at the several floors as required. The elevator itself was a platform and skeleton frame moved up and down the shaft by electric power with proper mechanism in the basement operated in response to a system of bell signals and was [473]*473used for hoisting or lowering material, tools, etc., as occasion required in connection with the construction work. None of the employees was permitted to ride upon this material hoist, and temporary stairs or ladders between floors were put up in the building for their use as the erection progressed. Notice was posted at the elevator prohibiting riding upon it. So far as shown this prohibition was not violated by any of the employees.

The drinking water was carried to the men on the job in a common water pail with a dipper in it for their use. Deceased’s duties were to supply their wants in that particular and take the water to them where they were at work on different floors. In the performance of his duties he customarily carried the filled pails of water to the elevator or hoist and sent. them up by it to the floor or floors where water was wanted and then would proceed by the ladders, or stairways, provided for the workmen to the floor where the water had been sent and carry it from the elevator to the men where they wanted it. A witness of defendants who testified that this was done “quite customarily” stated that he had seen the water boy get the pail off the elevator himself and, so far as witness knew, he generally did so.

Manifestly dangers and risks not even common to all the employees attended the services of this water boy in his trips serving water to the men in various parts of that tall and unfinished building, where conditions were constantly changing as the work went on. As his duties took him to all places where men were working he was not at any time long under the eye of or associated with any particular man or group of men. He fell down the shaft in the early part of the forenoon. No one noticed him go to the place from which he fell, or saw him when he started to fall, or knew what he was doing at that time. A [474]*474workman on the 7th floor saw him come up the stairway that morning, and noticed him with a pail serving water on that floor about 15 minutes before hearing of the accident,- but did not particularly watch him while there or pay any attention to where he went. No witness testified to seeing him after that time until he was falling. A foreman of the construction company called by defendant testified that he remembered seeing “Mike, the water boy,” that morning some time before the accident when he was one or two floors below the eighth floor, to which construction had then progressed with no floor above it and which was being completed that morning; that later, while standing 15 feet west of the permanent elevator shaft left in the center of the building on the 8th floor for a passenger elevator when the construction was completed, he saw the boy falling down the material hoist or temporary elevator shaft. His account of the incident in reply to questions by defendants’ counsel is as follows:

“Q. Where was he the day he was killed, when you saw him?
“A. Falling down the elevator shaft. * * *
“Q. What was it that directed your attention to the fact that Mike was falling?
# “A. The man I was talking with directed my attention to it, and wheeled me around to look.
“Q. Who was that man?
“A. A man by the name of McClellan.
“Q. What did you see as you turned around?
“A. I saw the water boy falling through the shaft —down the shaft.
“Q. At that time was he on the level of the floor or above?
“A. Above the floor.
“Q. How could he have gotten above the floor?
“A. Well, he might have fallen oif the elevator— he might have jumped off the floor—
“Q. How far above the level of the floor was he?
“A. Three feet — about 3 feet.
[475]*475“Q. In what position was his body as you saw him falling?
“A. Feet first.
“Q. Were any of his hands—
“A. One hand was extended above his head.
“Q. Did you notice where the platform of the elevator was at that time?
“A. It was up to what we call the cat-head — the platform was as far as it could go on the shaft.
“Q. Could a man of Mike’s physical stature have jumped and been in the position in which he was at the time you saw him?
“A. No.
“Q. Was it any part of Mike’s duties to make repairs on the elevator shaft?
“A. No, sir.”

This witness further testified that the boy’s duties were “to carry water to the men on the job” and in so doing he was permitted to go above the first floor to “where the men were working”; and that at the time he fell his water pail with water in it stood in the middle of the floor in front of the permanent elevator shaft. McClellan, who he said wheeled him around to look at the time Mike fell, was not called as a witness.

The construction company engaged in erecting this building was under the workmen’s compensation act and in reporting the accident to the industrial accident board adopted the theory of the “cause and manner of the accident,” as “riding on elevator (contrary to orders) and jumped off platform through hoist and fell back down shaft,” and declined to recognize any liability under the law. The testimony of all witnesses working there at that time who were interrogated is positive that they never saw any employees riding upon this elevator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 N.W. 195, 206 Mich. 471, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabriel-v-a-j-smith-construction-co-mich-1919.