O'Leary v. Brooks Elevator Co.

41 L.R.A. 677, 75 N.W. 919, 7 N.D. 554, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 103
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 L.R.A. 677 (O'Leary v. Brooks Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Leary v. Brooks Elevator Co., 41 L.R.A. 677, 75 N.W. 919, 7 N.D. 554, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 103 (N.D. 1898).

Opinion

Bartholomew, J.

Action for damages for a personal injury caused by the alleged negligence of defendant. When the evidence was closed, the court, on defendant’s motion, directed a verdict in its favor. The facts admitted, and which plaintiff’s evidence tended to establish, are as follows: The plaintiff, Joseph J. O’Leary, is a minor, and was 11 years old at the time of the trial, which was in January, 1897. J. D. O’Leary is plaintiff’s duly appointed guardian. The defendant is a corporation, and at the time of the injury complained of, and for several years prior thereto, owned and operated a grain elevator at the City of Hillsboro, in this state. The railroad track passes through the city, running north and south. Main street is west of the railroad track, and runs parallel therewith, the east line of the street being identical with the west line of the right of way. Fifth avenue, running east and west, crosses Main street and the railroad track at right angles. The defendant’s elevator property stands in the northeast corner formed by the intersection of Main street and Fifth avenue. The building nearest the corner was the engine house. This was a brick building between 8 and 9 feet wide, and 28 feet long, the front end facing west on Main street, but back from the street 8 or 10 feet. North from the north line of the [558]*558engine house, 20 feet distant, was the elevator proper. Starting in front of the engine house, and extending to and along the front of the elevator, was an elevated driveway for hauling grain to the elevator. This driveway was not more than 2 feet high whei'e it left the engine house, and raised to about 5 feet in height at the elevator. There was a railing on the driveway, and on the inside or east side it was boarded up from the ground to the driveway, but there were boards off, so a man could pass thi-ough. The elevator at the south end was 30 feet wide. The south side of the engine house ran back along the walk on the north side of Fifth avenue. The first side track of the railroad was 8 or 10 feet east of the east end of the engine house. The machinery in the elevator was connected with the engine by means of a shaft or tumbling rod extending across the space between the two buildings about 15 inches from the ground, and 6 or 8 feet from the driveway. About the middle of this shaft was a knuckle connecting two separate pieces of the shaft. This knuckle was bolted over the ends of the shaft, and by means of slots in the knuckle and in the shaft, into which iron wedges were fitted, a solid connection was made. These wedges would sometimes work loose, and, to void that, a wire, about the size of a large fence wire or telegraph wire, had been used to wind around the shaft and the knuckle in such a manner as to hold the wedges in place. The end of this wire was left standing out about six inches from the knuckle. Neither the shaft nor the knuckle was in any manner boxed or covered. When the shaft was in motion, the protruding end of the wire could not be seen, or, if seen at all, only as a dim outline. The shaft had been used by defendant in this uncovered conditioned for a number of years. Just how long the wire had been used does not appear. In the summer time, boys at play sometimes went upon this space between the engine house and the elevator, and over and around this shaft. The object that seems to have been attractive to children ,was an escape pipe that came out of the engine house a few feet distant fom the shaft. The spot would seem also to have been something [559]*559of a resort for tramps, as the evidence shows them to have been there on several occasions. These facts were all known to the defendant.

Late in the evening of July 19, 1896, the plaintiff, in company with one Riordan, reached Hillsboro. This man Riordan was plaintiff’s uncle, and was at that time his gurdian. His sight was defective. He could see sufficiently well for all purposes of locomotion, but he represented himself as blind, and was going through the country soliciting charity. Ostensibly, he was cared for by plaintiff, who led him withersoever he went. Plaintiff was completely under Riordan’s control. They stopped at an hotel that night, on Main street, and nearly opposite the elevator. The next morning, after breakfast, Riordan directed plaintiff to take him to some box cars that stood on the track, where he would smoke. They crossed over Main street on the north side of Fifth avenue, and followed the sidewalk going east until they had passed beyond the east end of the engine house far enough to permit Riordan to look into the space between the engine house and the elevator. There he saw a ladder lying on its side, and leaning against the boards that extended from the ground up to the driveway. He indicated that he would use that as his smoking place, and accordingly they passed into - the space, crossed over the shaft, and sat down on the ladder. As they sat down, Riordan dropped his cane in such a manner that it passed under the shaft. The shaft was in motion, and was revolving about 160 times per minute. After Riordan had finished smoking, he directed plaintiff to get his cane. In endeavoring to get the cane, plaintiff’s clothes were caught by the protruding and practically invisible end of the wire, and he was instantly whirled around with the revolving shaft and knuckle. The outcry caused the man in charge of the elevator to stop the engine as speedily as he could. The plaintiff was frightfully injured, but ultimately recovered, with the loss of one leg at the knee. The sole proposition involved in the case is whether or not defendant is liable, under the facts stated, in damages, for the injury to plaintiff.

[560]*560The precise principles of law that should measure the liability of the landowner to persons injured upon his lands are difficult of ascertainment. This arises in part from the inherent intricacies of the subject, and in a greater degree from the cirumstances that the facts in nearly every case are so clearly differentiated from the facts in every other case that it has not been possible for courts to establish many general rules governing such cases. More particularly has this been true when, as in this case, the injured person was a child; and, as capacity and responsibility on the part of the injured person are elements that always enter into the consideration of contributory negligence, it follows that with children the age and mental development make it still more difficult to establish general rules. In cases of this class, where the defendant has been held liable, the case of Lynch v. Nurdin, 1 Q. B. 29, is quite generally cited as an authority in favor of a recovery. On the other hand, and in the interests of landowner defendants, it has been urged that this case is not such an authority, because the injury in that case occurred in the public street, where the injured child had a legal right to go. In that case a horse and cart were left unhitched and unattended in the street, and the plaintiff, a lad seven years of age, climbing upon the cart; another boy led the horse away; and the plaintiff, in attempting to get down, was run over and injured. The owner of the horse and cart was held liable, on the ground of negligence in leaving the horse and cart unhitched, and with no person to take care of it, in a street where children were playing. While it is true that plaintiff was not a trespasser by being in the street, yet he was a trespasser when he climbed upon the cart. In Railroad Co. v. Stout, 17 Wall. 657, the Supreme Court of the United States, in speaking of Lynch v. Nurdin,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 L.R.A. 677, 75 N.W. 919, 7 N.D. 554, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oleary-v-brooks-elevator-co-nd-1898.