Hoskins v. Otis Elevator Co.

16 F.2d 220, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3807
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 27, 1926
DocketNo. 7222
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F.2d 220 (Hoskins v. Otis Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoskins v. Otis Elevator Co., 16 F.2d 220, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3807 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit for a death caused by the fall of a passenger elevator in the Randolph Hotel at Des Moines on March 24, 1923. From a judgment entered on a verdict directed for the defendant, plaintiff sues this writ of error.

The defendant herein was neither owner por operator of the hotel, but is engaged in the business of manufacturing and installing passenger elevators, and the elevator in question was made and installed by it. Appellee contends that it owed no legal duty of care as to construction, installation or maintenance of this elevator to passengers who might use it. It contends, also, that there was a legal break in the causal connection, even if it were negligent as alleged, because an independent human agency intervened between its alleged negligence and the accident resulting in the injury. In the view which we take of the evidence, we find it unnecessary to determine such contentions.

The second amended petition, as amended, alleged ten specifications of negligence, as to character of construction or maintenance, relating to various parts of the elevator machinery, which may be summarized as follows:

(1) Cables — defective, unsafe and insufficient strength — pulled loose — otherwise would have stalled motor.
(2) Cables — not strong enough to withstand motor pull.
(3) Cables — defectively attached to cage.
(4) Fuses — too high amperage — lower would have blown out.
(5) Safety device — tangled or fouled.
(6) Safety device — defectively designed —(a) frame too far away to keep governing cable in grooves on drum and thereby prevent overlapping or fouling — (b) not far enough away to prevent cable wedging between spool and frame — frame negligently installed.
(7) Safety device — no effective device to keep governing cable in grooves which was essential to its proper operation.
(8) Carbon contact clamps — unsafe, permitted carbon contacts to fall out.
(9) Counterweight stools — not set when counterweight cables renewed (a week before accident), but left in condition where would not operate switch breaker.
(10) Safety device — no provision against turning spool in wrong direction by T-wrench —if wrongly turned would tend to foul governing cable. Must be inserted from above, so one using could not see that it was being wrongly wound.

At the end of plaintiff’s evidence, the court sustained a demurrer to all of the above grounds except 3 and 5, above, and, at the close of all the evidence, directed a verdict upon these two.

We think the court was right in sustaining the demurrer and directing a verdict as to the following allegations and for the fol[221]*221lowing reasons: The allegations of negligence (1 and 2 above), charging that the cables which supported the car were insufficient in strength and defective, were not proven because the evidence shows that these cables did not break.

The allegation of negligence (3) that the above cables were defectively attached to the cage, because of insufficient or improper babbitting into the shackles attached to the car, is not sufficiently proven either as a fact in itself or as being the cause of the accident or if they had been properly babbitted, as being able to prevent the accident. The strain put upon these cables and shackle joints was sueh as would not and could not occur in the normal operation of the elevator and there were at least two electrical safety devices (the drum and counterweight breakers) which would have prevented an abnormal strain, sueh as occurred here, from ever being placed upon these cables or shackle joints.

The allegation of negligence (4) concerning the fuses, is unsupported because the evidence fails to show that the fuses in use at the time of the accident were those installed by defendant or such as defendant recommended or instructed to be installed. In fact, the evidence is to the contrary.

The allegation of negligence as to the carbon contact clamps (8) was not established as a question for the jury because, even if those clamps were negligently constructed and designed, yet the evidence is clear that it was the duty of the engineer of the hotel company to care for them, and while the absence of this carbon was a contributing cause to the accident, the evidence shows that the car did stop ánd remain stationary for some time after these contacts “froze” and that the negligence from that source was insulated by the later independent act of the hotel clerk (for the acts of whom the elevator company was not responsible) in closing the circuit when he could have seen the condition of the clamps at the time.

The allegation of negligence (9), as to the counterweight stools, is unproven as a cause of the accident because the evidence shows (a) that the switch breaker did work and.the car stopped; (b) that the drum slack cable circuit breaker operated; and (c) it is not shown that the stools did not hold the counterweight circuit breaker in place until the cables were tom loose from the car and the other counterweights fell, at which time no electrical device could have prevented the fall.

The evidence fails to show any defect in the electrical safety appliances, but, on the contrary, conclusively shows that some, if not all, of them did work. To our minds, there is no escape from the conclusion that the sole failure of these electrical devices to be effective in preventing the accident was caused by the act of the hotel clerk, who nullified their effect by holding in place the circuit closer until the ear had tom loose and started to fall.

This leaves for consideration the allegations (5, 6, 7 and 9), concerning the mechanical safety device. This device was entirely disconnected from the motive power and was designed to operate automatically to meet one and only one danger. It was designed to operate only in case the car descended at an abnormally rapid speed. It was the only device which could prevent the car falling if the power devices failed through any cause. The construction and purpose of this device and its condition at the time of accident and its relation to the accident are undisputed. It was attached to the bottom of the car floor between two steel channels. It consisted of a grooved metal spool from the ends of which projected rods reaching to the guide rails along which the elevator moved. Into one end of this spool was inserted and attached the end of a bronze cable about one-half inch in diameter. This cable wound around the spool in the grooves and then passed to the top of the shaft where there was a governor with jaws which could firmly engage this cable. The method of operation was that the govern- or could be regulated so that if the car descended at an abnormal speed, the governor jaws would firmly clamp the cable, causing it to unwind the spool, and the unwinding of the spool had the effect of thrusting out and closing clamps upon the guide rail which would stop the car within a few feet and hold it firmly stationary until the device was released. The evidence conclusively shows that when this car started to fall, the governor functioned as intended, that the governor jaws clamped firmly on the cable but that the cable was tom through the jaws because the spool would not turn, even when subjected to this great pressure.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 220, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskins-v-otis-elevator-co-ca8-1926.