Hyde v. Blumenthal

110 A. 862, 136 Md. 445, 1920 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 110 A. 862 (Hyde v. Blumenthal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyde v. Blumenthal, 110 A. 862, 136 Md. 445, 1920 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Tills is an appeal from a judgment for $7,500.00 in favor of an employer for the use of the insurer and for the use of an employee, who was injured while on the premises of a third party.

*446 It appeal’s from the record that on the happening of the accident, Moran, the employee, applied for compensation to the State Accident Commission and was awarded $12.00 a week to he paid by the Blumenthal-Kahn Company, employer, and the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, insurer, and that after receiving about $669.00' under this award, he thought he was able to work and signed a paper giving’ up his weekly allowance. ' This suit was subsequently entered against the appellant. The facts of the case are substantially as follows:

George W. Hyde-, the appellant, in September, 1917, was the proprietor of lunch rooms at 322 and 324 North Howard Street, in Baltimore City. On September 18th, 1917, William M. Moran, an employee of the Blumenthal-Kahn Electric Company, the appellee herein, was sent by appellee to make some repairs to a motor in the kitchen of appellant in the third story of appellant’s building, appellee having’ been employed to- do this work. The dining room fronts on the west side of Howard Street and the north half of the room extends back a distance of about 50 feet from the rear wall of the building on State Street-, and the southern half extends back to within about 10 or 12 feet from said rear wall. The pantry is located in the northwestern section of the first floor in the L formed by the two sections of the dining room and is on the same level with the dining room. There is a public entrance to the dining room on the Howard Street front. The rear entrance to the building on State Street opens into a hallway which runs along the north wall of the building. This hallway is about 20 feet 6 inches long and about 4 or1 5 feet wide. At the end of this hallway is an elevator. On the south side of tire hall, at the distance of about 14 feet from the entrance,- is a door from the hallway which leads down into the pantry by a stairway of five or six steps, the hallway being on a level 4 feet 6 inches higher than the level of the pantry floor. This door is ahout« 3 feet wide, and the distance from the east side of the doorway to the -elevator shaft is 3 feet 3 inches. On the right of these steps leading *447 to the pantry floor is the wall constituting the back or west wall of the pantry. To the left there is no wall or railing, the stairway being an open one, the steps being wholly within the pantry. There is an entrance to the elevator from the pantry level. There is. a spiral stairway in the pantry about 10 feet east of the elevator shaft, and located along the northern wall of the. pantry, and this spiral stairway leads, from the pantry to the floors above, and is about 10 feet, distant from the elevator shaft. The elevator shaft has doors opening outward on the pantry level. The doorway at the State Street entrance takes up nearly the entire hall space.

The main stairway to the lunch room on the second floor is in the front of the dining room on the south side thereof, and there is a passenger elevator located near this stairway.There, is no passageway on the same level from the foot of the spiral stairway in the pantry to 'State Street. It is necessary to ascend the steps from the pantry to the hallway leading into State Street in order' to get out that way. State Street is a narrow street or alley from 15 to 17 feet wide.

When Moran came to work the first day he entered the building through the front or Howard Street entrance. According to his testimony he arrived there at 9 or 10 o’clock in the morning, met a Mr. Sterling, whom he took to be the manager, and told him his business) showing him his slip. Sterling took him, by the shoulder and led him back to the spiral staircase leading to the kitchen on the third floor. “When he got out by the hall leading to the spiral stairs,” ho let go his shoulder. Witness did not finish on September 18th. When he left the. building that day he came out the back way, through the pantry, up the steps to the hall and through the hall to 'State Street. As he went out everything was safe and the door was open, “and I thought I’ could use the back way just as well as the front, and I went out the back way — .everything looked safe when 1 went out there.” When he returned the next morning about 7:45 to finish the work he came in the same way he went out the day before. The doors were open as he walked through the hall. “I *448 walked out this hall, and it is about five feet wide, and I walked right do-wn this elevator shaft.” He did not see any elevator shaft there the day before; when he oame it was closed in. In answer to the question what, if any, protection was there to the shaft at that time, he replied: “I could not have fell if there was any protection there at all. There was none there at all, and there was a chain hanging down on both sides, half on each side of the door.” He further-testified that he did not bréale the chain in tire fall; that it was open when he went down; that the elevator doors, opening on the hall, were not closed and there was no light there at all; that there was an old electric light there but it was out of use being broken; that he fell about twenty feet and was severely injured. Witness further testified he had never-been in the building until the day before the accident when he entered by the front door, and, without instruction or permission, left.by the rear door; that when he returned the morning of the accident and entered the rear door through which he had passed in leaving the building, on the only other occasion he was ever there, he found there was no light in the hall and it was so dark he could not find the opening or door leading into the pantry for which he was; looking, and it was while looking for this opening that be got by it and walked into the elevator shaft; that there was neither daylight nor eleetriet light in the hall, except such as was reflected from the alley; that the elevator door leading into the pantry was closed at the time of the accident, hut after he was hurt the door was opened, “and then you could see because the light then reflected up* through the elevator shaft”; that at the-time of the accident there was; no light at all. In answer to the question whether it was so dark he could not see his hand in front of his face, he replied: “I won’t say that bad, hut it might have been.” He also was unable to s-ay whether he was walking slowly or fast.

Appellant testified that the electric light fixture in the hall had been out of use for a long time; that it was; broken shortly after it was installed and was never repaired because *449 tbe ball was lighted hy a transom over the rear door and by electric lights in the pantry which were reflected through the door leading directly into thei hall from the pantry and through the door opening into the elevator from, the pantry, which doors were left open. Other witnesses for appellant testified these doors were always open. No one, however, was present just at the time of the accident and the testimony of witnesses that these doors, were open after' the accident and were always wide open was not. necessarily in conflict with Moran’s testimony that there was no light being ren fleeted through them at the moment of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A. 862, 136 Md. 445, 1920 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyde-v-blumenthal-md-1920.