Hood v. . Mitchell

167 S.E. 570, 204 N.C. 130, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 338
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 8, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 570 (Hood v. . Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood v. . Mitchell, 167 S.E. 570, 204 N.C. 130, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 338 (N.C. 1933).

Opinion

This is an action to recover damages resulting from personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff, and caused, as alleged in the complaint, by the negligence of the defendants.

The plaintiff is a physician engaged in the practice of his profession in the city of Gastonia, N.C. Since 1924, he has occupied offices in a building located in the city of Gastonia, known as the Third Trust Company Building. He entered into possession of said offices in 1924, as a tenant of the Third Trust Company, which was at that time the owner of said building.

On or about 29 April, 1929, the Commercial Bank and Trust Company, a corporation organized and doing business as a banking corporation under the laws of the State of North Carolina, suspended its business. The Corporation Commission of North Carolina took possession of all the assets of said company for purposes of liquidation. Since said date, the said Corporation Commission, acting through the defendant, John Mitchell, chief State Bank Examiner, and its successor, the defendant, Gurney P. Hood, Commissioner of Banks, have been, successively, engaged in the liquidation of said Commercial Bank and Trust Company, as provided by statute.

Among the assets of said Commercial Bank and Trust Company, which came into the possession of the said Corporation Commission, were certain equities in the office building owned by the Third Trust Company. The said office building was encumbered by a deed of trust *Page 132 executed by the Third Trust Building to secure certain bonds which had been issued by said Third Trust Company, and which were then outstanding. The deed of trust was foreclosed, and the Corporation Commission, as authorized by a decree of the Superior Court of Gaston County, purchased said building at a sale made on 14 February, 1930. In accordance with said decree, the said office building was conveyed by the trustee in said deed of trust, to the defendant, John Mitchell, chief State Bank Examiner, by deed dated 25 February, 1930. Since the date of said deed, the defendant, John Mitchell, chief State Bank Examiner, has held said office building as an asset of the Commercial Bank and Trust Company of Gastonia. The said office building is now under the control and in the possession of the defendant, Gurney P. Hood, Commissioner of Banks, who as successor of the Corporation Commission is now engaged in the liquidation of the Commercial Bank and Trust Company.

The allegations of the complaint in which the plaintiff states the cause of action on which he seeks to recover of the defendants in this action, are as follows:

"14. That the plaintiff has continuously been a tenant in the building aforesaid since early in 1924, and became a tenant of the defendants by renting rooms in the said Third Trust Company Building as offices for the use and conduct of his profession, and that the plaintiff has occupied, and still occupies offices in said building for the purpose aforesaid, and has continuously been and is now a tenant of said defendants since the purchase by defendants as aforesaid and the execution of the aforesaid deed of conveyance on or about 25 February, 1930.

15. That among other things, the defendants by their contract of rental agreement were to render competent elevator service to the plaintiff and plaintiff's clientele in reaching plaintiff's offices from the ground or main floor of the building to the floor on which said offices are located.

16. That the defendants in lieu of keeping an employee at all times for the operation of elevators in said building, furnished the plaintiff an instrument or key to unlock the doors of the elevator shaft, so that in case of requiring the use of said elevator, when the defendants' operator was off duty, he might unlock the door and use the elevator; and that the defendants instructed the plaintiff as to the operation of said elevator.

17. That the defendants, their agents and servants, represented to the plaintiff that said elevator was equipped with the latest and most approved type of safety devices, one of which said safety devices was to prevent said door or doors of the shaft from being unlocked by the *Page 133 instrument or key furnished plaintiff by defendants unless the car or elevator was at the floor of said building where it was desired to use the said elevator, and further represented that it was impossible to unlock said door or doors unless the elevator was in place at said particular door or doors.

18. That relying upon the representations aforesaid, and believing that said safety device or devices were in proper and safe working order, the plaintiff on Sunday night, 6 April, 1930, desiring to enter his offices on the fifth floor of said building, entered the lobby or hallway of defendants' said building, inserted the key in the lock of said elevator door, and opened the same, and stepped into what he reasonably expected to be the car or elevator, but the said car or elevator was not there, when plaintiff stepped into the elevator shaft, and the plaintiff was thrown or hurled fourteen feet or more into the basement floor below; that defendants had carelessly and negligently allowed and permitted the said safety device on the door of said elevator shaft to get out of proper working order, and, as before alleged, the plaintiff was thrown or hurled a distance of fourteen feet or more; that plaintiff suffered the following injuries, to wit: a fractured knee-cap on the right knee, causing a part of the knee cap to be broken loose and float below the joint; badly bruised and lacerated left elbow joint; three bruises on the lower jaw, leaving a permanent scar on plaintiff's chin, four teeth knocked out or crushed; the back of the head and neck of plaintiff severely bruised, causing paralysis of the anterior group of muscles in the right thigh, and from the aforesaid injuries and the shock sustained by reason of the fall, this plaintiff was unconscious for about three days and incurred considerable hospital and medical expense.

19. That at the time aforesaid, when the plaintiff went into said building for the purpose of opening said elevator and going into his offices, as aforesaid, it was necessary for him to go into the lobby or hallway of said building, which led to the elevator or elevator shaft; that the defendants did not maintain or have any light or method of illuminating said lobby or hallway and particularly at the time when this plaintiff entered the same as aforesaid; that it was dark in said hallway or lobby; that the only way or method provided by the defendants for lighting or illuminating said elevator at said time or times, was the lighting apparatus or fixture within the elevator; that this could not be reached or turned on so as to give light, until after the door of the said elevator shaft had been opened, and the switch or light in said elevator turned on after entrance into said elevator; that at the time aforesaid, when the plaintiff entered said lobby or hallway, the same was dark, and the only way the plaintiff had of reaching the light *Page 134 was to open said door of the elevator shaft and go into the elevator and turn or switch on the light, as aforesaid, all of which the plaintiff intended to do as was his usual custom when entering the elevator at night when the same was dark.

20.

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167 S.E. 570, 204 N.C. 130, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-mitchell-nc-1933.