Kentucky Hotel Co. v. Camp

30 S.W. 1010, 97 Ky. 424, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 1010 (Kentucky Hotel Co. v. Camp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Hotel Co. v. Camp, 30 S.W. 1010, 97 Ky. 424, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 207 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JUDGE GRACE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal by appellant is from a judgment of the Jefferson Circuit Court in favor of appellee for the sum of five hundred dollars, recovered for injuries sustained by Willie [427]*427Camp while being carried in the elevator of appellant, at the Willard Hotel, then operated by this company.

The injury occurred in November, 1891. This suit has been twice tried,-the first trial resulting in a verdict for the defendant. This was set aside and a new trial granted by the court, and this is the first complaint of appellant.

The evidencetended to show that this elevator was aheavy one, having a double department, one for passengers and the other for freight, and that it was operated by two boys, Frank Jackson and Claude Smith, by turns; that this accident happened near the change of the boys; that Claude Smith, the younger and smaller boy, and less experienced, was operating the elevator. And that Frank Jackson was in the elevator waiting for his watch to come on. That the little boy, Willie Camp, had just gone up with his father, but forgetting some cigar boxes he wanted, had gone back, got his boxes, .and was going up to his floor again. That when getting in the elevator he took his seat on one of the benches as customary, but that Frank Jackson said he would draw for the boy a picture and not wanting Camp to see it until it was finished, told him to sit down on the floor, which the boy- did, as he says about the middle of the elevator, meaning, as we gather it from the evidence, about the middle from side to side, but immediately in front of the-door, and manifestly not a great way from it. And that while thus sitting a moment, Jackson called his attention, and in turning on the floor towards -Jackson, his foot was caught between the elevator at the door and the joists of one of the floors as it ascended. That his heel was mashed, the small bone of his leg was broken, and the tendon strained and shortened. This leg for some distance up towards his- knee was bruised and injured.

It appears that his injuries were serious, and painful, that [428]*428bis limb was placed in a plaster of Paris bandage for some weeks, and after that in a sole-leather bandage. That he finally got out of bed, but that even at the time of the second trial his leg still hurt him, not continuously, but when he walked any considerable distance on it. The physician who attended him expressed the opinion that the injury had materially injured the boy’s nervous system, and impaired his general health.

Some testimony was offered showing that the smaller boy, Smith, was too light to operate this elevator with pérfect ■control. That occasionally he had to jump up, seize the rope with his hands, and remain suspended by it. Though the evidence shows the elevator was at this time stopped in a reasonably short distance after the little boy, Camp, cried out.

The charge in the petition was that the two boys, Jackson .and Smith, were unfit to operate this elevator with safety, and that the appellant company was guilty of negligence in employing and in retaining them for this work, and that they, the boys, were guilty of negligence in operating the elevator; whereby plaintiff was injured. Camp'was at the time of the injury less than seven years old..

This was substantially the evidence on both trials. It may be added, however, that the boys, Smith and Jackson, had been warned by the mother of the boy, Camp, to be careful, and to make him sit on the seats when in the elevator.

On the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff on each trial, appellant moved the court'for a peremptory instruction. This was refused each time.

The first verdict was set aside and a new trial granted because the court misinstructed the jury, and because the ■court excluded some evidence properly admissible as a part of the res gestae, this being a statement made by Jackson [429]*429to Mrs. Camp immediately after the injury and while Jackson had the injured boy in his arms, having carried him to his mother’s room.

The court in the first trial failed to lay down correctly the degree of care, skill and diligence necessary to be used in operating an elevator, saying in general terms that if the defendant or its agents operating the elevator were guilty of negligence whereby the injury occurred then they should find for plaintiff, otherwise for the defendant, and failed to attach any definition of either diligence or negligence to the instructions on the first trial. This error alone in the instruction given was sufficient to authorize the court to grant a new trial.

This error was corrected by the court on the second trial, as follows, viz.:

“First, The court instructs the jury that itwas the dutyof the defendant to exercise the highest degree of care and skill usually exercised by prudent persons in the same business, in the management and operation of the elevator in which plaintiff was riding at the time he was injured. And if they believe from the evidence'that the defendant failed te. exercise that degree of care in the selection of its agents or servants to run said elevator, or if they shall believe from the evidence that the defendant’s agents or servants in charge of said elevator, whether competent or not, failed to exercise that degree of care in the management thereof,, and that plaintiff was injured by reason of such failure, then the law is for the plaintiff, and they should so find', provided they further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was not guilty of negligence which contributed to cause his injuries. And that he would not have been injured, but for his contributory negligence, if any there was.

No. 2 seems to be the reverse of this.

[430]*430In No. 3 the court again speaks of contributory negligence by plaintiff as barring his recovery, but adds this important limitation: “But the jury ought not to hud plaintiff contributed by negligence to cause his injury, unless they shall believe from the evidence that he failed to exercise that degree of care for his own safety which ordinarily careful and prudent children of his age, experience and discretion are accustomed to observe under same or similar circumstances:.’

The main instruction, No. 1, as well as this limitation as to the care and prudence to be expected of this child, we think are correctly set forth by the court.

It is the same degree of care, skill and diligence that this court has so often held applicable to railroads in carrying passengers, and which seems to be the settled, law on that subject in Kentucky.

In Mr. Ray’s work on Negligence it is said: “The relation between the owner and manager of an elevator for passengers, and those carried in it, is similar to that between an ordinary public carrier of passengers and those carried by him. And he is liable to be treated as a public carrier of passengers, and the same responsibilities rest on-him as to diligence and care, as to the carrier of passengers by stage-coach or railway.”

And, again, same author says, p. 308: “A proprietor of an elevator for carrying passengers, who used the elevator in lifting persons vertically to the height of forty feet, is a carrier of passengers and subject to the same responsibilities. The same degree of responsibility must attach to one controlling and running an elevator. Persons who are lifted by elevators are subject to great risks of life and limb.”

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30 S.W. 1010, 97 Ky. 424, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-hotel-co-v-camp-kyctapp-1895.