Hunyadi v. Stratfield Hotel, Inc.

119 A.2d 321, 143 Conn. 77, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 21, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 119 A.2d 321 (Hunyadi v. Stratfield Hotel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunyadi v. Stratfield Hotel, Inc., 119 A.2d 321, 143 Conn. 77, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 132 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The defendant has appealed from the judgments rendered upon verdicts for the plaintiffs in these actions. In each case, it has assigned error in the action of the court in sustaining a demurrer to one of its special defenses and in the charge to the jury. The cases were tried together and the appeals present identical questions of law. We shall consider them as one.

[79]*79The claims of proof of the plaintiffs are as follows: In August, 1950, they were employed by George J. Steinhardt, Inc., as journeymen electricians and were working at the Stratfield Hotel, where Steinhardt had a contract with the defendant to change its electrical system. In the hotel there was a freight elevator which ran from the basement to the ground floor level, a rise of approximately fifteen feet. The employees of the Steinhardt company, including the plaintiffs, were permitted to use this elevator. The defendant’s employees and others having business with the hotel also used it. It was powered by electricity and was operated by a hand cable in the elevator cage. The machinery which raised and lowered the cage was located in a small room next to the elevator shaft. No one but the defendant’s employees had access to this room. The machinery consisted in part of two drums around which the elevator cable was wound. The drums were rotated by a motor through a main gear and a pinion gear. The main gear was made of cast iron and had been in place for at least twenty-two years. One of the teeth on the main gear, which engaged the pinion gear, had been broken off and had been missing for at least six months. The main gear also contained an area of spongy porosity which weakened it, but this area, which was not ascertainable by inspection, did not in any way contribute to the breaking of the gear which occurred.

On August 1, 1950, the plaintiffs loaded the elevator at the basement floor with miscellaneous materials, including two heavy iron conduit pipes. The conduit pipes were placed in the elevator in an approximately vertical position, and one of them protruded through the top of the cage. The plaintiffs boarded the elevator with the load and started it [80]*80to go np to the ground level. When the cage reached a point about three-quarters of the way up to the ground floor, there was a snap and the cage plunged to the bottom of the shaft. The plaintiffs were seriously injured. The extra wear and pounding to which the main gear had been subjected by reason of its continued operation with a missing tooth caused the gear to break and the cage to fall. The plaintiffs’ injuries were caused by the failure of the defendant properly to inspect and repair the defective main gear.

The defendant made the following claims of proof: The plaintiffs’ employer, the Steinhardt company, was an independent contractor. The plaintiffs had become accustomed to use the elevator and were familiar with its operation. When they loaded the elevator, they permitted the longer of the two conduit pipes to extend above the top of the cage a considerable distance. Just before the floor of the cage reached the level of the ground floor of the hotel, the end of this conduit pipe struck the ceiling of the elevator shaft, which was made of heavy concrete. The impact suddenly placed a tremendous weight upon the elevator cable and main gear, causing the gear to break and the elevator cage to fall. The elevator mechanism was not defective, and its collapse was caused by the negligence of the plaintiffs in loading the conduit pipes so that the longer one protruded above the elevator cage and in operating the elevator so that the pipe struck the ceiling of the shaft with great force. The plaintiffs’ injuries were caused by their own negligence.

These claims present two basically different theories as to the cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries. Bearing upon the plaintiffs’ negligence as claimed by the defendant, a charge to this effect was requested [81]*81by the defendant: It being admitted that the plaintiffs were in control of the loading and operation of the elevator, they, and not the defendant, had the responsibility for its safe operation. On the issue of control of the elevator, the court charged, in substance, that the control lay with the one who had the authority to superintend and regulate the use of the elevator and to repair it. The defendant does not complain about the correctness of this charge as it applied to the plaintiffs’ theory of the cause of the accident. The defendant says that it never disclaimed control of the machinery located in the gear wheel compartment, to which the plaintiffs did not have access. It claims, however, that the charge was inadequate because it failed to take into account the defendant’s theory as to the cause of the fall of the elevator and did not explain the legal consequences if the jury found that the main gear was sound but was broken as a result of an impact between the conduit pipe and the top of the elevator shaft which occurred because of the faulty loading and operation of the elevator cage by the plaintiffs.

The court in its charge specifically referred to the defendant’s claim that the plaintiffs were not making a normal use of the elevator, that it was loaded with pipe which protruded above the top of the cage, that one of the pipes struck the ceiling of the elevator shaft, causing the gear to break and the elevator to fall, and that this was an abnormally dangerous method of operation. The court specifically instructed the jury that the defendant was not liable for an accident resulting from a hidden defect in the mechanism unless the defendant in the exercise of reasonable care should have known of the defect. It charged further that the duty of the defendant was to exercise reasonable care to have the elevator [82]*82reasonably safe for its normal nse and that the defendant was not bound to anticipate and guard against an unusually dangerous method of operation.

When one of the parties claims that the evidence offered proves certain facts influential to the decision of the case and properly requests the court to charge the legal consequences if such facts are found, the court is in duty bound to comply in substance with the request. Tyburszec v. Heatter, 141 Conn. 183, 187, 104 A.2d 548; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proe., p. 91. The court is not required to adopt the language of the request. Substantial compliance is ample. McKirdy v. Cascio, 142 Conn. 80, 87, 111 A.2d 555; Boland v. Vanderbilt, 140 Conn. 520, 522, 102 A.2d 362; Maltbie, op. cit., § 66. The charge given was a substantial compliance with the request and was adequate for the guidance of the jury.

The defendant requested an instruction that it was not liable for an accident resulting from an undiscoverable hidden defect. This was given in the precise terms requested. The defendant complains that it was not in context. Granted that be so, the charge must be considered as a whole, and its sufficiency and accuracy in guiding the jury must be examined from that standpoint. Steinecke v. Medalie, 139 Conn. 152, 157, 90 A.2d 875; Maltbie, op. cit., § 51.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

O'Brien v. Ski Sundown, Inc., No. Cv 00-0083444 S (Feb. 7, 2003)
2003 Conn. Super. Ct. 2905-cq (Connecticut Superior Court, 2003)
Novella v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
316 A.2d 394 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1972)
Royal Homes, Inc. v. Dalene Hardwood Flooring Co.
199 A.2d 698 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1964)
Lopes v. Connecticut Light & Power Co.
142 A.2d 135 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1958)
Crowder v. Zion Baptist Church, Inc.
119 A.2d 736 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 A.2d 321, 143 Conn. 77, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunyadi-v-stratfield-hotel-inc-conn-1955.