Girard v. Kabatznick

9 Conn. Super. Ct. 405, 9 Conn. Supp. 405, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 108
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 27, 1941
DocketFile 58411
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Conn. Super. Ct. 405 (Girard v. Kabatznick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girard v. Kabatznick, 9 Conn. Super. Ct. 405, 9 Conn. Supp. 405, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 108 (Colo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BALDWIN, J.

This action was brought by the named plaintiff to recover damages resulting from injuries caused by a fall on the 18th day of February, 1939, in an elevator shaft in a building owned by the estate of Jacob Kabatsnick, and located at the corner of Main and Rapallo Streets in the City of Middletown.

The named plaintiff was an employee of the Simmons Company, a Delaware corporation, located in New Haven, which corporation has paid compensation to its employee under our compensation laws and has therefore intervened as a party plaintiff.

Upon the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, upon motion, Minnie Kabatznick, who was a defendant in her individual capacity, was granted judgment of nonsuit.

The building in which the elevator and its shaft are located is a three-story building with a basement. The elevator and shaft are at the rear of the building and run from the basement to the third story, the machinery operating the elevator being located in a small enclosure on the roof of the building.

A portion of the basement, a portion of the ground or main floor running along Rapallo Street, and the second and third floors are occupied by the owner of the building, the Estate of Jacob Kabatsnick, and it conducts therein its furniture business.

The remaining portions' of the basement and of the ground or main floor are occupied by the defendant, The Great Atlantic 6? Pacific Tea Company, under a lease for a term of three years from June 1, 1938 to May 31, 1941, with privilege of seven successive yearly renewals.

*407 The tea company conducts a general merchandising business in its store on the main floor, which has a front of 53 feet and a depth of 100 feet and it occupies for storage purposes approximately 1,800 square feet of the basement floor under its lease, this space being partitioned off from that occupied by the owner, the Kabatznick Estate.

On the basement floor on three sides of the elevator shaft a space is partitioned off from the rest of the basement floor space for common use by the Kabat?(nick Furniture Company and the tea company. The other side of the elevator shaft is the rear wall of the building.

The elevator shaft is at the rear of the building, and where it extends through the main floor it is within the area occupied by the tea company under its lease. From the main floor there is a passway which runs alongside of the elevator to an enclosure attached to the rear of the building, which passway provides a direct rear entrance to and exit from that part of the main floor occupied by the tea company. As one enters the main floor through this rear passway the elevator shaft is upon his left.

The enclosure referred to is a brick structure. While it is not included in the description of the premises described in the lease, a part of the space within the enclosure is occupied by the tea company for storage purposes and some of its empty crates, cases and cartons go out through this enclosure, the floor of which is the ground and is slightly lower than the main floor of the store of the tea company.

Within this enclosure along the outside of the main building there is a platform nine feet long, four and one-half feet wide, and approximately three and one-half feet high. It is, approximately, three feet higher than the level of the main floor. A door, sliding to the left, as one stands on the platform facing it, opens into the elevator shaft.

This enclosure, platform, door, elevator and shaft are arranged so that a truck may back into the enclosure and up to the platform for the purpose of loading or unloading merchandise, and the enclosure, platform and elevator are in frequent daily use by the furniture company since it is the only practical available way or means for receiving and shipping its merchandise. This enclosure is also used by the furniture company as a garage in which to house its truck overnight.

*408 This enclosure, platform, door, elevator and shaft as a way or means for receiving or shipping its merchandise .is very rarely used by the tea company. The entrance to the enclosure from the outside is through a door which is of insufficient size to admit into the enclosure the large trucks that deliver merchandise to this company. As a way through which merchandise is received by the tea company this rear entrance has been used but two or three times and those times were shortly after it first occupied the premises, when it was found impossible to admit the large trucks employed in delivering merchandise to the tea company into the enclosure and also otherwise inconvenient. On these occasions it did not appear whether the platform and elevator were used.

The passway from the main floor to the enclosure is the much more convenient means of a rear entrance to or exit from that floor. To the basement for the receipt or shipping of heavy or bulky merchandise, the platform and elevator is the more convenient when the rear entrance is used by the tea company, provided trucks are used that can be admitted into the enclosure.

The front entrance to the store of the tea company is the entrance commonly used for receipt and delivery of its merchandise. At this entrance is a wide sidewalk substantially level with the store floor. At this entrance merchandise is received and by the use of hand trucks such merchandise as may be placed on the shelves of the store is there placed and the remainder is conveyed back to the elevator and by use of the elevator conveyed to the basement.

The elevator is also used at times on which to carry merchandise by the tea company from the basement to the main floor. This use is usually in the morning and usually before the furniture company has opened for business, as the tea company’s hour for opening business is earlier than that of the furniture company.

Occasionally during thé hours of the day the tea company may have need of use of the elevator to convey merchandise from the basement to the store floor. In such event it will seek permission for such use from the furniture company or some of its employees. -

The lease includes no reference to the elevator or to its use *409 by the tea company, except as the word “appurtenance” is used in the lease.

The mechanism and power operating the elevator are under the control of the furniture company and the cost of the power operating it is paid for by the furniture company, as is also all cost of repairs to the elevator and to the shaft and all entrances thereto. The furniture company has a contract with the Otis Elevator Company providing for inspection, servicing and repairs, and the expense of such inspection, servicing and repairs the furniture company alone pays. The elevator is registered in the Labor Department of the State as that of the furniture company. Its use by the tea company is merely incidental and a permissive use. Its control is solely in the furniture company. There is no intention disclosed in the lease or otherwise to part with any control by the furniture company or to assume any control by the tea company of the elevator or its shaft or any entrance to the shaft.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Conn. Super. Ct. 405, 9 Conn. Supp. 405, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girard-v-kabatznick-connsuperct-1941.