Purcell v. Tennent Shoe Co.

86 S.W. 121, 187 Mo. 276, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 121 (Purcell v. Tennent Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purcell v. Tennent Shoe Co., 86 S.W. 121, 187 Mo. 276, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 261 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J. —

This is an action for ten thousand dollars damages for personal injuries, received by the plaintiff on April 23, 1900, while in the discharge of his duty as a servant of the defendant. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, the plaintiff stood on the ruling, a verdict was rendered for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.

This petition alleges that the defendant corporation occupies, and does business in, a five-story building, numbered 823 and 825 Washington avenue, in St. Louis, in which it maintains and operates a freight elevator, operated by hydraulic power, and which is started or stopped by a rope or cable fastened to a [281]*281valve in the cellar and extending up the elevator shaft; that the elevator shaft has a lattice guard or railing around it, on each floor, with a gate thereto which lifts up and works like-a window on weights, remaining at the height to which it is raised; that the plaintiff was an employee of the defendant as porter or minor clerk and it was his duty to sort shoe samples, run errands and sweep the floors, including the false floors over the elevator shaft on the several floors.

The specific negligence of the defendant charged is, first, that the elevator was defectively and dangerously constructed and operated, in this, that the gates did not close automatically, hut would remain in the position to which they were raised, and that defendant habitually and commonly permitted the gates to remain open and the shaft ungarded when the elevator was not on the level with the floor, and that there were strong iron hooks or plates attached to and projecting outwardly two inches from the floor of the elevator, which passed through narrow grooves cut in the several floors, so that when the gates were open and the elevator passed by the open gate, -there was no guard to protect persons standing on the floor of the building and near such opening, from being caught by such projecting hooks or plates and being carried upward against the bottom of the open gate; second, that the defendant permitted any person in the building to run the elevator, and without any warning that it was to he moved; third, that there is an ordinance of the city of St. Louis that requires users of all power elevators to employ a competent person aged not less than sixteen years to run them, and that defendant failed to employ such a competent person to run its elevator, hut permitted divers of its employees who were unskilled in running elevators to run the same.

The petition then alleges that-while plaintiff was in the discharge of his duty and was sweeping the false floor or covering over the elevator shaft on the [282]*282second floor of the building and while the gate thereto was raised and open, the defendant caused the elevator to start upward at a high rate of speed, whereby plaintiff’s leg was caught by one of said hooks or plates, and he was carried upward six or eight feet, and his head struck against the bottom of the gate, inflicting great injury upon him.

The answer is a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence, and a plea of assumption of risk.

The case made by the plaintiff is this:

The plaintiff was nineteen years of age, and had been in the employ of the defendant as a porter or minor clerk for about ten days; his duties chiefly were to help to load and unload the freight elevator, and to sweep the building, including the covers on the elevator shaft. The defendant used the whole of the five story building. There were two elevators in the building, a passenger elevator and a freight elevator. Around the elevator shaft on each floor there was a fence or railing, with a gate which worked on weights so as to be lifted like a window. The freight elevator was run by hydraulic power, and was equipped with appliances for covering the shaft at each floor to prevent accidents. These appliances consisted of false floors, which were connected with the elevator and worked automatically. Thus: there were six such false floors above the top of the elevator and six below'' the bottom of the elevator. Those below the elevator worked on a system of ropes and weights, so that when the elevator was at the bottom of the shaft, they were all pressed down below the bottom of the elevator. As the elevator went on up, these would rise with the elevator, the lowest one to the height of the first floor only, where it would stop automatically and cover the opening of the shaft like a prolongation of the floor of the building; the next would rise to the height of the second floor and cover the opening in the shaft there, and so on to the top, the purpose [283]*283being that the opening to the shaft should be covered while the elevator was up. Those above the elevator worked thus: when the elevator was at the bottom, one of such false floors would cover the opening of the shaft at each floor. When the elevator went up, the top of the elevator would carry the false floor at the second floor on up with it, and so at each floor, and when the elevator got to the fifth floor, all of the false covers that covered the opening of the shaft when the elevator started up, would be at the top of the elevator, having been thus carried up by the elevator as it rose. As the elevator went' down the topmost of these covers would stop automatically at the fifth floor and cover the shaft opening there, and so on, successively at each floor, so that when the elevator reached the bottom, each floor_would have a covering over the shaft opening. To prevent the false floor at the top from coming all the way down, and to .cause one to stop at the proper floor, they had iron prongs that extended out about two inches from the bottom of the false floor, and which prongs fitted into narrow grooves in the floor, thereby causing the top of the cover to be on a level with the floor. (The petition erroneously charged that these iron prongs extended out from the floor of the elevator, but the evidence shows they were attached to the floors of the false floors aforesaid.)

On the day of the accident the plaintiff was sweeping the second floor. In order to sweep the false floor or covering he stood close to the shaft and at the open gate and reached over to the false floor or cover. The gate was raised six or eight feet. While so engaged the elevator came up and shoved the false floor upward. One of the iron prongs aforesaid attached to the bottom-of the false floor became entangled with the shoe or bottom of the trousers on plaintiff’s left leg, and he was carried upward, so that his head and shoulder struck against the bottom of the raised gate, and he was in[284]*284jured. There was no one on the elevator, and there is no evidence in the case to show who started it.

There were electric hells on each floor of the building at the elevator shaft. The defendant had promulgated and posted a system of signals to be employed in using the elevator, which required any one who desired to use the elevator to ring the hell once on the floor he was on and where he wanted the elevator to come. If the elevator was not in use, the reply would be two rings of the hell. If the elevator was in use, there would he no reply. On this occasion the bell was not rung at all. The bells could be heard on every floor by a person standing for from twenty-five to fifty feet from the elevator shaft. The defendant had a man whose sole duty it was to run the passenger elevator, but no one whose sole duty it was to run the freight elevator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 121, 187 Mo. 276, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purcell-v-tennent-shoe-co-mo-1905.