Quimby v. Bee Building Co.

127 N.W. 118, 87 Neb. 193, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 207
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1910
DocketNo. 16,078
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 127 N.W. 118 (Quimby v. Bee Building Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quimby v. Bee Building Co., 127 N.W. 118, 87 Neb. 193, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 207 (Neb. 1910).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

Plaintiff, a boy twelve years of age, who, during the summer vaca lion of school, was acting as a messenger boy for the Postal Telegraph Company, was injured in [194]*194one of the passenger elevators of defendant. From a judgment in his favor for such injury, defendant appeals.

The evidence shows that the floor of defendant’s building, at each landing, projects some two or more inches into the elevator shaft and inside of the wire network surrounding the shaft. The space between the floor of the elevator at the opening thereof and the floor of the building is just enough to permit the elevator to pass; so that, if a person standing at the -door of the elevator should permit liis foot to extend even a very little over the edge of the elevator floor, it would be caught by the lower part of the floor landing above as he ascended. At the time of the injury complained of, plaintiff entered the elevator for the purpose of being carried to a floor above, where he desired to deliver a message. The evidence is somewhat conflicting as to whether he entered the elevator at the first or second floor, but we regard that as immaterial. When the elevator reached the third floor, plaintiff’s foot was caught between the elevator floor and the projection above noted, and he received the injury complained of. Plaintiff testified that, when he entered the elevator, he “just turned around and leaned against the side of the elevator — was going to get out right away as soon as I got to the floor I wanted off on”; that he stood near the door all the time. It is evident that while standing there his foot was partially extended beyond the edge of the elevator floor. The elevator conductor testified that plaintiff “stepped clear in the car, something unusual, then stepped back. There being rubber on tlfe floor I did not hear him.” This plaintiff denied. The elevator conductor also testified that the boy had been going up and down the elevator for about a month; that he had several times cautioned him to stand back from the door, and on one occasion had pushed him back. He admits that he did not give plaintiff any such direction or caution at the time of the injury. On cross-examination he testified that he liad been running an elevator for eight years; that if is dangerous for people to stand up near the door, as [195]*195elevators pass up and down, and especially as they go up, and that it.was his duty to caution people to step back whenever he saw them “up in front.” Plaintiff insists that the construction of the building and elevator as above outlined was negligent, and that defendant’s agent in charge of the elevator was negligent in permitting the plaintiff, who was only a boy, to stand in, what he, the conductor, knew was a place of danger.

The fourth instruction given by the court on its own motion is as follows: “You are instructed it was the duty of the defendant, the Bee Building Company, to use the greatest amount of human care and skill consistent with the operation of said elevators to prevent injuries to its passengers while they were being transported from one part of the building to the other. It is also the duty of the defendant to use greater care and caution in transporting passengers of tender age than when carrying adults or passengers of mature years, but in this c.ase there is no presumption of negligence from the mere fact that said Walter Quimby was a passenger and received an injury while being carried by the elevator.” Defendant seriously objects to all but the last clause of this instruction, on the ground that it imposed too great a burden upon defendant; that it in fact imposed upon defendant an obligation which was impossible of performance. In this contention we are unable to concur. One who installs passenger elevators in his building for the use of his tenants and the public generally is subject to the same degree of care in transporting and protecting his passengers as is imposed upon common carriers.

In Marker v. Mitchell, 54 Fed. 637, the syllabus reads: “A landlord who runs an elevator for the use of his tenants and their visitors thereby becomes a common carrier, and is charged with the highest degree of care which human foresight can suggest, both as to the machinery and the conduct of his servants; and an instruction that he owes to persons thus put completely under his control ‘the highest degree of care consistent with the possibility [196]*196of injury/ while unfortunate in the choice of words, does not misstate the law, and, being explained by the context, is no ground for reversal.” In discussing this instruction in the opinion, Taft, Circuit Judge, said: “I am of opinion that the language used by the court was not fortunate. The highest degree of care consistent with the possibility of injury is rather a blind expression, but it seems to me that it was sufficiently explained by the context in the charge, and that it did not, therefore, mislead the jury. ‘Consistent with the possibility of injury/ as thus explained, meant ‘commensurate with or proportion'ate to the possibility of injury in the use of the elevator.’ The theory of the court was that the liability of Mitchell in the running of a passenger elevator was the same as that of a common carrier, and the standard for a common carrier is the highest degree of care which human foresight can suggest. This view is sustained by the case of Goodsell v. Taylor, a decision of the supreme court of Minnesota, reported in 42 N. W. 873, and by the case of Treadwell v. Whittier, a decision of the supreme court of California, reported in 22 Pac. 266. It is contended that such a rule applies to the machinery used, but does not apply to the conduct of the employees of a common carrier. No case has been cited which makes this distinction. On the contrary, the opinion of the supreme court of the United States in Stokes v. Saltonstall, 13 Pet. (U. S.) *181, considered in connection with the facts of that case, seems to refute the contention.”

In the Minnesota case (Goodsell v. Taylor, 41 Minn. 207), cited by Judge Taft, Gilfillan, C. J., says: “The relation between the owner and manager of an elevator for passengers and those carried in it is similar to that between an ordinary common carrier of passengers and those carried by him. The same reason exists for requiring on the part of the owner the utmost human care and foresight, and for making him responsible for the slightest degree of negligence.”

In the syllabus of the California case (Treadwell v. [197]*197Whittier, 80 Cal. 574), cited by Judge Taft, it is held: “Persons operating an elevator in lifting passengers are to be treated as carriers of passengers,, and the same duties and responsibilities rest on them as to care and diligence as on the carriers of passengers by stage-coach or railway. Though not insurers of the absolute safety of the passengers, they are bound to the utmost care and diligence of very cautious persons, as far as human care and foresight can go, and are responsible for injury occasioned by the slighest neglect against which human prudence and foresight might have guarded. The responsibility is proportioned to the danger, and is of the highest character in the case of those who operate elevators for lifting persons from one level to another.”

In Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Woods, 88 Ill. App. 375, the syllabus reads:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 N.W. 118, 87 Neb. 193, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quimby-v-bee-building-co-neb-1910.