Morris & Co. v. Alvis

121 S.E. 145, 138 Va. 149, 1924 Va. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 145 (Morris & Co. v. Alvis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris & Co. v. Alvis, 121 S.E. 145, 138 Va. 149, 1924 Va. LEXIS 19 (Va. 1924).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by Alvis against Morris and Company, Incorporated, to recover damages for a personal injury received by falling into an open elevator shaft •on the premises of the defendant. This is the second time this case has been before this court. It is first reported as Morris & Co. v. Alvis, 130 Va. 434, 107 S. E. 664. The testimony as to the physical arrangement of the building, the absence of any door to the elevator, the method of supplying this deficiency, the inadequacy of the lighting system, the circumstances attending the accident and the like, was much the same on the second trial as on the first. The following statement is taken from the opinion of the court on the former liearing.in this court:

“Morris and Company is a corporation extensivély engaged in packing and selling meats, and has a branch house in Lynchburg. Alvis had been working for the company about five months. His principal business was that of city salesman and collector, but it was further his duty at times and as occasion required to assist with various kinds of work in the house. He and other employees were occasionally there at night in the performance of some of their duties and in the regular line of their employment.
“The accident occurred on the night of October 26, 1917. On the afternoon of that day one Ross, a traveling auditor for the defendant, had come to Lynchburg to check up the business, and not having completed [154]*154Ms work during the afternoon, he and Alvis came back to the building that mght. There is a contention on behalf of the defendant that Alvis was there voluntarily, and not in the line of Ms employment, and another contention that he was there temporarily in the capacity of manager, but we tMnk the evidence is otherwise.
“The first floor of the building consists of tMee main compartments, a sMpping room in front (reached by the main entrance to the building), an office room to the right of the sMpping room, and a canned meat room in the rear. Between the sMpping room and the canned meat room there is an elevator shaft enclosed on three sides, the fourth and open side facing the shipping-room. ' To the rear of the office and to the right of the elevator is an entrance to a cellar stairway. To the left of the elevator is the .entrance to the meat room. The situation of the main entrance, the office door, the-open side of the elevator shaft, and the door to the meat room are relatively such that a man maMng a. trip__from outside of the building tMough the main entrance into the office, and thence to the meat room, would on coming in the main entrance walk diagonally to Ms right tMough the sMpping room into the office, then, coming back out of the office, he would walk again diagonally to his right, passing the elevator door, and around the elevator shaft into the meat room.
“According to the testimony of the plaintiff, in some respects very much in conflict with the testimony of other witnesses, but accepted by the jury, the circumstances of the accident were substantially as follows: .
“When Ross and Alvis went back to the office on theMght in question, they entered the sMpping room tMough the main entrance, and found their way tMough the shipping room into the office by means of the‘reflection of a light from that compartment, there! being-[155]*155a glass partition between the office and shipping room. The electric lamps or bulbs in the office were insufficient for their purposes, and Ross suggested that they must have more light. Thereupon both of them started in •search of other bulbs which they hoped to find in some other compartment. They went first to the meat room following the course above indicated, the plaintiff ■feeling his way around the wall until he was sure that he had passed the elevator opening. Failing to find the bulbs they wanted in the meat, they turned back, intending to go to the cellar where they thought they would find them. To do this they had to pass the open •elevator door again. The plaintiff, who was immediately in front of Ross, did not on the return trip feel his way, but depended upon his estimate of the distance, and when he thought he had proceeded far enough to be beyond the opening in the elevator, he stepped into the' shaft and fell to the floor of the elevator, which at the time was in the cellar. It had been left in that position by two colored men whom Ross had ‘picked up on the street’ that afternoon to help him. He didn’t know ‘who they were or anything about them;’ and.so far as the record discloses nobody connected with either the plaintiff or the defendant ever heard of them either before or after the aceident.
“There had originally been a door to the elevator .shaft on the shipping room floor, but this door had been broken off or displaced for a year or more, and was not in use at any time after Alvis came there to work. Instead of replacing the door the defendant adopted the expedient of using the elevator, when not in use for •elevator purposes, to close the shaft by placing and .leaving it so that the floor thereof was even with the floor of the shipping room, thus practically extending the floor of-the shipping room into the elevator shaft, and thus obviating the danger resulting from the dis[156]*156placed door. In other words, the rule of the company as a part of its plan for maintaining the first floor of its building in a safe condition, required that the elevator when not in use should be left so that the floor thereof would be flush with the office floor. The evidence is not entirely clear as to whose business it was to see that the elevator was left in this position when not in active use, but it was a freight elevator, operated from time, to time by various employees, and the fair inference appears to be that this duty devolved upon any employee who had occasion to operate the conveyor.
“It is also shown that for some time prior to the accident the lighting system in the building had been in a defective condition. Some of the switches not working well, and also that the supply of electric bulbs was entirely insufficient to thoroughly light the building at night. There was not a great deal of night work to be done, and the custom had been to move the limited number of lights from place to place as occasion required
“The plaintiff, Alvis, was fully apprised of all the foregoing conditions. The absent door, the custom of keeping the elevator, when not in use, on the office floor as a substitute for a door, and the. insufficiency of the lighting system were all conditions which had prevailed ever since he begun work with the company. He testifies about all of these facts, and his testimony shows that he was thoroughly familiar with them all, saying particularly with reference to the lights, as showing that he was often there at night, that ‘there never were enough bulbs for all the place and we shifted them about from one place to another when we worked at night.’ This statement was in reply to a question by his counsel as to how long that condition had pre-' vailed; and he further testifies that if he ever made any complaint to the company about that condition, he does not remember it.”

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 145, 138 Va. 149, 1924 Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-co-v-alvis-va-1924.