Murphy v. Hays

23 N.Y.S. 70, 68 Hun 450, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 450, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 749
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 N.Y.S. 70 (Murphy v. Hays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Hays, 23 N.Y.S. 70, 68 Hun 450, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 450, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 749 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

The plaintiff sues as administratrix to recover damages for the death of her intestate, caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the defendants. The intestate was in the employ of the Marvin Company as a safe mover, and was killed while transferring a safe to an office on the seventh floor of defendants’ building. In this building were two passenger elevators, one of which was constructed for the purpose of carrying freight as well as passengers. The complaint alleged that the defendants, “by arid through' their wrongful, negligent, and careless acts and omissions in the management of the said elevator, while the safe was being taken up and off the said elevator, caused the death of the said Patrick Murphy, without fault on the part of the said deceased.” The defendants’ building had been recently constructed, and no claim is advanced but that the machinery and elevators were of the newest and most approved pattern, and in all respects suitable for the uses for which they were designed, including the hoisting of safes from the ground floor to any of the other floors occupied by tenants. The evidence shows that, on the day of the accident, plaintiff’s intestate, with several others, who were in the employ of the Marvin Safe Company, had placed the safe on the elevator, which was then set in motion, and rose until it reached the seventh story of the building, at which place it was intended to remove the safe, and place it in one of the offices on that floor. When the elevator stopped, two iron shoes were put under, and the car lowered so as [72]*72to rest thereon. These iron shoes, which had been made according to the recommendation, and under the direction, of an experienced man, were for the purpose of bracing the elevator when it had arrived at the proper floor, and so relieve the strain on the cables while the safe was being removed. They consisted of two broad pieces of iron, which extended beneath the floor of the car, and then, making a double angle, projected out over the floor of the hallway. After the elevator was thus lowered upon the shoes, according to the testimony of certain of plaintiff’s witnesses, the car began to sag, and the janitor shouted down the elevator shaft to the engineer in the basement to put on some pressure. Whether the pressure was put on or not, it is uncontradicted that the car was brought to a standstill, the flooring was evened up, and four or five men got hold of the safe,—some at the sides, and some in front,—and pulled at it, to run it out into the hall. While so engaged, and after the safe got partly Out of the car, plaintiff’s witnesses testify that the elevator rose suddenly, but gradually, about three feet, tipping the safe over, and throwing Murphy, the intestate, who was standing in the hall, in front of the safe, through the grating, and down the opposite elevator shaft, killing him instantly. Although a different view as to the cause of the tipping over of the safe was advanced by the defendants, we shall, in ppr discussion, assume the claim as to the rising of the elevator having caused the safe to be overthrown to be the correct theory.

The fact that the accident occurred under the circumstances narrated would not, under the well-settled rules, entitle the plaintiff to recover. The burden was upon her to establish the liability of the defendants, and to do this she was bound to show that the death was caused solely by the defendant’s negligence. The plaintiff, recognizing this to be the rule of law, undertook to support this burden by endeavoring to show that what produced the movement of the elevator, and the throwing over of the safe, was the result of such negligence. She did not claim, as shown, that any reliance was placed upon defective machinery or appliances, but rested upon the contention that the accident resulted from the negligent management of the elevator while the safe was being taken off. Expert testimony was introduced, directed towards establishing that the jumping up of the elevator was caused in one of two ways: First, because the engineer had pressure on; or, second, because there was air in the cylinder,—and that, to whichever of these causes it was due, -it was equally the negligence of the defendants. One of the experts, in answer to the question, “What would cause the elevator to ascend after it had stopped, and was stationary?” said:

“That would he caused, in the experience I have had. in two or three ways: ' One cause would be that it would have to be operated by somebody operating the hand rope. Another cause would be that when the car was brought to a rest, with a heavy load on it, this valve below here,—the operating valve,—wasn’t closed, or there may have been air in the cylinder. Some additional pressure would have to be applied. If pressure was suddenly put on, tire car would ascend.”

[73]*73How sound are these theories, supported as they are by the opinions of experts, must be determined by the facts proven, upon which they rest. That any one operated the hand rope was discarded. The plaintiff called the engineer of the defendants, who was in charge of the elevators at the time of the accident, and who testified that the equipment of the elevators consisted of the regular pump and tank pressure system used for passengers, in which the water is pumped into a tank, and thence into the cylinders, and the pressure is regulated by the elevator conductor by means of the wire rope which passes through the car, and connects with the valve, and that, in addition, there was provided for the freight elevator, to raise the heavy safes, another pump, known as the “high-duty pump,” which forced the water directly into the cylinder without the intervention of a tank; that upon this day the power communicated to the elevator was not from the - pressure tank at all; that in hoisting up this safe that day “the power was communicated directly into the circulating pipe. The valve of the pressure tank has to be closed when we are using the freight pump, so we can’t work both of those pumps at the same time with the same elevator. Upon this day, when this accident happened, we were using only one pump,—the pump that I call the ‘high-duty pump.’” He further testified that after the elevator became stationary, and the shoes had been placed beneath it, there was no pressure, it having-been entirely shut off. Against this positive evidence we have the testimony of witnesses who claim to have heard the janitor on the seventh floor call down to the engineer to “hold the pressure,” or “keep up the pressure,”—which the engineer states he did not hear, and, as matter of fact, did not do,—followed by opinions of experts that if the pressure was on, upon the weight of the safe being partially removed, it would result in the rising of the elevator. We do not- think such evidence sufficient to justify the inference that there was pressure on, particularly when we remember that the car did not continue to rise after the safe had fallen. It would be difficult to understand, upon the theory that the rising was due to continuous pressure, how the elevator, with the safe -partly upon it, could have risen three feet, upsetting the safe, and then have stopped, when relieved of the weight after the safe had fallen. It would seem that the effect of such pressure, if it had existed, would have been, not only to upset the safe after raising the elevator three feet, but to cause the elevator to rise until it reached the top of the building, unless sooner stopped „by the engineer cutting off-or removing such pressure. Equally without evidence to sustain it is the liypóthesis that there was air in the cylinder.

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Related

Murphy v. Hays
26 N.Y.S. 1116 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.Y.S. 70, 68 Hun 450, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 450, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-hays-nysupct-1893.