Oliver v. Lynn Meat Co.

93 S.W.2d 114, 230 Mo. App. 1021, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 93 S.W.2d 114 (Oliver v. Lynn Meat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Lynn Meat Co., 93 S.W.2d 114, 230 Mo. App. 1021, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*1024 BECKER, J.

Plaintiff, respondent here, sued to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a fall down an elevator shaft on defendant’s premises.

The petition sets out that plaintiff was an invitee on the premises and in attempting to use the elevator was caused to fall down the shaft by reason of defendant’s negligence in failing to equip the elevator with an interlock which would prevent the opening of any shaft-way door or gate unless the elevator platform was within six inches •of that particular landing, all in violation of an ordinance of the city of St. Louis.

The answer generally denied the allegations of the petition, and affirmatively alleged that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by his own carelessness and negligence in stepping into an unlighted elevator •shaft when he should have known that the elevator was at another floor, and without exercising ordinary care to discover that the elevator was not at the first floor level. The reply generally denied this assertion on the part of defendant.

The evidence shows substantially the following situation: Defendant is engaged in the retail food business and maintains a large store at the northeast comer of Sixth and Morgan (now Delmar) streets in the city of St. Louis. The first floor of this building is reserved for customers, while the upper floors are used for various utility purposes, such as storage of goods and live poultry and a bakery department. The basement is also used for various purposes, among others, ■a section equipped with large kettles and other devices for the dressing of poultry. In order to reach the various floors defendant maintained a typical freight elevator for the carrying of goods from one place to another, and this was located near the rear or east end of the building, one room separated from the north wall. According to the testimony of an expert elevatór engineer, the openings, with the exception'of the first floor, were equipped with a mechanical device which would secure the shaftway gate against opening up when the elevator platform wasn’t within a safe distance of the opening. The *1025 first floor gate could be manually raised, regardless of the position of the elevator, if a person knelt down and detached a spring lock which held the gate in place. However, unless this first floor gate was within two inches of the floor, the elevator could not be moved, as the further opening of the gate would break the electrical contact. The ceiling of the elevator was equipped with a dome light, but this could not be switched on without entering the elevator platform.

Plaintiff had been employed by defendant for approximately six years before the accident. His duties were varied and he generally performed whatever work was assigned to him by the manager. At times he served as night watchman in the absence of the regular man, and at other times remained to watch the store on Sundays. During the regular working days his duties took him to all of the floor levels, including the basement, and he had, many times, operated the elevator. He did not work every day, although he reported practically every morning to see if there was anything for him to do. During his spare time he accepted outside work and shortly before his fall, some one in the store, plaintiff thought it was the manager, told him that the proprietor of a small restaurant in the neighborhood wanted some one to paint his restaurant, and this man was a good customer of the store. Accordingly, plaintiff contacted this man and secured the job, which he was doing in his spare time, including evenings. In his-deposition plaintiff stated that this painting job had nothing to do with his work at the Lynn market. He had, however, secured permission from defendant to use some of its equipment, including brushes and a scaffold board.

On the day of the accident plaintiff had worked for defendant all day in the store. Until after five o’clock he had been at work dressing poultry in the basement, which consisted of turning steam into large 'kettles and using the hot water thus formed for cleaning and picking the fowl. Defendant purchased the steam from, an outside concern, the amount it used being measured by meter and paid for according to the amount used. In order to use the steam it was necessary to turn on a valve near the meter and sometime before this the manager had cautioned him about leaving the valve turned on and had told him that he would hold him personally accountable. Plaintiff contemplated doing some more painting at the restaurant that evening and accordingly left the store between six and seven o’clock for that purpose. In the course of his painting plaintiff found himself in need of a scaffold board and he returned to the store for the purpose of obtaining one. He went to the side door near the east end of the building and, after knocking and stating the reason for his return, was admitted by the night watchman. At that time the dome light on the elevator was lighted and he operated the elevator to the second floor and got the board, then returned by elevator, leaving it at the first *1026 floor level and went back to the restaurant. A short time later plaintiff returned to the store for the second time that evening. In' a deposition taken prior to the trial the plaintiff testified that on his second visit to the store, when the watchman opened the door and let him in, he informed the night watchman that he wanted to get some linseed oil out of his locker in the basement. On direct examination at the trial, plaintiff testified that while painting he suddenly recalled the steam valve and his employer’s admonition concerning it, and not knowing whether it was on or off, he determined'to find out and therefore returned to'the store to see if it had been turned off. Plaintiff testified that he did not inform the night watchman that he returned ■ to check up’ on the steam valve. The watchman testified however that it was duty to go over the building and see that the steam valves were turned off.

When plaintiff entered the side door he walked directly to the elevator shaft and, after raising the gate, stepped in and fell' approximately fifteen feet.to the bottom of the shaft. It being after business hours no lights were burning in- the store except a small oné in the office and another in the storeroom just north of the elevator. The elevator shaft was dark and there was not enough reflection from the lights to see whether or not the elevator platform was at the first floor' level. Plaintiff testified that defendant had installed new gates for the entrances to the elevator shaft a few weeks before, and that the elevator could not be moved unless these gates were down. There is testimony also to the effect that unless the elevator was at the floor level, the gates guarding the shaft on that floor could not be opened. Plaintiff testified that when he raised the gate he assumed that the elevator was there but he did not know whether the gate could be raised in the absence of the elevator, although he knew that the gate bn the second floor could not be raised unless the elevator was on that level.

Plaintiff read in evidence the ordinance set out in his petition and, after the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant requested an instruction in the nature of a demurrer and upon its refusal stood thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 114, 230 Mo. App. 1021, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-lynn-meat-co-moctapp-1936.