George A. Fuller Co. v. McCloskey

228 U.S. 194, 33 S. Ct. 471, 57 L. Ed. 795, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2364
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 7, 1913
Docket176
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 228 U.S. 194 (George A. Fuller Co. v. McCloskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George A. Fuller Co. v. McCloskey, 228 U.S. 194, 33 S. Ct. 471, 57 L. Ed. 795, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2364 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by Wilson A. McCloskey, the defendant in error, to recover damages for personal injuries caused by alleged negligence in the operation of an *198 elevator in the Hibbs Building in this District. At the time of the accident McCloskey, who will be called the plaintiff, was engaged in painting, the elevator shaft and for this purpose was riding on top of the elevator. The action was brought against the Otis Elevator Company, and the plaintiff in error, George A. Fuller Company. Without objection, a verdict was directed in favor of the Otis Elevator Company, but the case against the Géorge A. Fuller Company was submitted to the jury who found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The judgment on this verdict was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of the District and the case comes here on writ of error. 35 App. D. C. 595.

The facts appearing upon the trial are succinctly stated in the opinion of the court below, in which the George A. Fuller Company is described as the defendant, as follows:

“The defendant company contracted with William B. Hibbs to erect for him an office building on 15th Street is this city. The work was to be completed by a time certain. This contract did not include the installation of an elevator. That work was provided for in a contract between Hibbs and the Otis Elevator Company. The elevator company installed its elevator long before the completion of the building. This elevator, down to the time of the injury to the plaintiff, had not been tinned over to the owner of the building, but was operated by an employé of the Otis Company, who was paid and generally controlled by that company. After its installation the defendant company entered into an arrangement with the elevator company by which it became entitled to use this elevator in the prosecution of its work, paying to the elevator- company three dollars per day, which was to cover the wages of the caretaker or operator aforesaid, the Otis Company reserving the primary right to use the elevator. Under this arrangement the defendant *199 company was to have no control over the.elevator operator other than to notify him when to start and when to stop his machine.

“The defendant company entered into a subcontract with the Robert E. Mackay Company of New York for the painting required by its contract with Mr. Hibbs. The plaintiff was an employé of the Mackay Company. The elevator shaft was included in this subcontract. To paint this it was of course necessary that some means be provided whereby workmen could ascend and descend the shaft. Therefore the Mackay Company entered into an agreement with the defendant company by which the defendant company agreed to furnish the Mackay Company, for use in painting said shaft'elevator, power and operator at any time that the elevator company or the defendant company did not want them. Nothing whatever was said about the arrangement between the elevator company and the defendant company, the agreement between the Mackay and the defendant company proceeding upon the theory that the equipment and elevator were under the control of the defendant company. The Mackay Company was not to have, and in fact did not have, any control over the operator other than to direct him when to start and when to stop his elevator while thus temporarily used as . a movable staging.

“Upon the day of the accident plaintiff and another workman were on the roof of the elevator touching up the walls of the shaft. They had worked down until the floor of the car was on a level with the first floor of the building. To finish the walls of the shaft between the first and second floors of the building, the space then occupied by the body of the car, it became necessary to get under the car. To do this it was necessary for the painters to be taken to the next or second floor landing. The plaintiff was standing on the rim or ledge around the top of the car and facing the centre of the car. He had *200 a paint box and brush in his hands. The other painter was on another side of the top with his back to the plaintiff. This rim or ledge was about six and one-half inches wide. Plaintiff called to the elevator operator to take him and the other painter up to the second floor and let them off there. There was evidence before the jury that when the car had reached a point where plaintiff had directed that it be stopped, the car paused and suddenly started again, throwing plaintiff off his balance, which he was unable to regain until the car has reached the fifth floor, where he was caught in the weights which passed the car at that point.”

The contention based upon the asserted insufficiency of the declaration is without merit. So far as appears the evidence was received without any objection upon this ground, and the assignment of error rests solely upon the refusal of the trial court to grant a general prayer that the court'should instruct the jury that “under the pleadings and all the evidence” their verdict should be for the Fuller Company. It is urged that there is no sufficient averment of the negligence of this company and attention is directed to the allegation of the declaration that the plaintiff “requested the said defendant, Otis Elevator Company, its servants and employés to stop said elevator at the second floor, so that he might get off and alight therefrom.” It is manifest, however, from the other allegations of the declaration that the plaintiff intended to charge, and did charge, negligence on the part of both defendants. The attention of the trial court was not called to any particular in which the declaration was deemed to be insufficient as against the Fuller Company and no mention was made of the specific point now raised. If this point had been suggested it is apparent that, in view of the allegations contained in the declaration, such variance as there was between pleading and proof could properly have been met by an immediate amendment and the case could *201 then have been submitted to the jury precisely as it was submitted.

It is also assigned as error that the trial court improperly modified one of the requests of the Fuller Company for instruction upon the subject of contributory negligence. The requested instruction with the modification made by the trial court, which appears in the words italicized, was as follows: “If the Jury find from all the evidence that the accident to the plaintiff was occasioned wholly or in part by reason of the fact that he had placed himself in an exposed and dangerous position on the ledge around the top of the elevator car,.with reference to obeying the signals, to stop at the-second floor, if you find such signals were given when he'might readily, have placed himself in a safe and secure position, the verdict should be for the defendant the George A. Fuller Company, regardless of any supposed negligence'on the part of the elevator operator and regardless of-whether the'operator was a servant of the Fuller Company'or not.” The court undoubtedly added these words because the evidence showed that the plaintiff had askpd the operator to stop at the second floor and there was no danger from the weights until the elevator reached the fifth floor.

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Bluebook (online)
228 U.S. 194, 33 S. Ct. 471, 57 L. Ed. 795, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-a-fuller-co-v-mccloskey-scotus-1913.