Russo v. Morris Building & Land Improvement Ass'n

104 La. 426
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,089
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 104 La. 426 (Russo v. Morris Building & Land Improvement Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russo v. Morris Building & Land Improvement Ass'n, 104 La. 426 (La. 1900).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This is an action for the recovery of five thousand dollars damages for personal injuries that plaintiff alleges he sustained in 'one of the defendant’s elevaiors in the ITennen building, in the city of New Orleans, by reason of the fault and negligence of its servants and agents.

[427]*427The cause was tried by a jury, who rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, for one thousand dollars, by a majority of nine jurors in favor of the plaintiff, lo three in favor of the defendant; and a motion for a new trial, on the ground that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and evidence, having been overruled, the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

In this court, the plaintiff filed an answer to the appeal, and requested that the allowance in his favor be increased to five thousand dollars, the amount originally demanded.

The averment of the petition is, substantially, that the defendant owns and maintains a large office building in the city of New Orleans, known as the Hennen building, in which four elevators are operated, and which it holds out to the public as safe, and to which those having business in the building are invited as a safe means of conveyance from one floor thereof to another.

That on the 10th of November, 1897,- petitioner having business in one of the offices of said building, entered one of said elevators to be carried to one of the upper floors, when the servant, agent and vice-principal of the defendant operating same, “was guilty of gross negligence and carelessness in the operation of said elevator; his negligence consisting first, in starting the said elevator too quickly, and before he had time fo fully enter same; and second, in carelessly knocking against petitioner, whereby he lost his balance.”

In addition to the foregoing charge of fault and negligence, petitioner makes the further and additional charge, “that said elevator was carelessly and negligently constructed in not having an inside gate or door which would prevent any passenger from striking any one of the sills of the shaft of the building^ and that by reason of * * * the negligence of the defendant in having an unsafe construction into which he, as one of the public, was invited, he had his arm broken by being brought into violent contact with the sill of the floor of the building, as the elevator passed it, whereby he has been crippled for life, &c.”

lie alleges that he was altogether without fault or negligence, and did not cause or contribute to the. accident in any way.

The answer is a general denial, coupled with the specific averment, that the defendant was guilty of no negligence either in the construction or operation of its elevator; and, further, that its elevator “is of [428]*428modern device and is reasonably safe, and lias daily carried hundreds of passengers safely and conveniently.”

It alleges that plaintiffs injury was inflicted by and through his own fault, and by his own awkwardness, or was the result of an unforeseen accident, for wjiich it is in no way responsible.

It is made quite evident from an examination of the evidence, that the plaintiff’s left arm was so 'seriously mutilated that same has been rendered comparatively useless for life; and, if the defendant is shown to have been at fault, either in the construction, or operation of its elevator, it should be held responsible in damages therefor.

Counsel for defendant attracts our attention to the fact that the first jury who tried the case found a verdict for the defendant, and the second one only found a verdict for one thousand dollars, by a majority of nine to three; and that, considering the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injuries, these circumstances necessarily imply a grave doubt as to the defendant being in fault, and that the bare existence of a doubt should have resulted in a verdict in defendant’s favor.

With regard to the alleged faultiness of the construction of the elevator, we find no evidence in the record, and we may safely assume that the charge of fault on that score was abandoned in the lower court, notwithstanding it was renewed in argument and in brief in this court.

The point made in the argument on this score, to the effect that the gate which closes the way for the entrance and exit of passengers was attached to the wall outside of the elevator, and not to the elevator, thereby leaving an open space between the elevator and the wall sufficiently great to admit an arm or leg, and, therefore, it was a constant menace to the safety of passengers, cannot be sustained in view of the fact that it had been successfully operated in that condition during a series of years, without other accidents than the one complained of, notwithstanding three or four thousand of passengers had been daily carried up and down thereupon.

It is claimed that the elevators in the defendant’s office building, which is several stories in height, are of the latest modern pattern, and of the most improved design of any in the country; and the evidence discloses nothing to the contrary.

We may, with perfect satisfaction, pass'from this branch of the case, to the examination of the charge of the defendant’s culpable fault and negligence in the manner in which its elevator was operated on the day the accident happened.

[429]*429It will, in our opinion, be the better course to first examine the testimony with regard to the manner in which the accident happened, as it may prove the best method of enabling us to solve the question under investigation.

The testimony given by the messenger boy who was in the elevator at the time the accident happened is to the effect that “he came into the Hennen Building, and just as he got in the elevator, these two men came in behind (him)”- — referring to the plaintiff and his companion.

“I stood in the corner, opposite the elevator boy, and these two men stood in the middle. The elevator started off and went up fast; it went so fast that the man went just right off of his feet, and when it hit the second floor, the elevator boy slopped, and brought the man down, and I jumped out of the elevator.

“Q. — Where was his arm caught ?
“A. — Between the floor of the elevator and that gate there.
“Q.- — Between the floor of the elevator and what else ?
“A. — Between the railing — a fence like.
“Q. — Was the gate on the elevator, or shaft?
“A. — On the shaft.
“Q. — Do you know what it was that made Santo Eusso fall over?
“A.- — No, sir; it looked like the elevator went so fast that it made him fall over. It seemed so, because he went down so quick.
“Q. — Did it start slow and gentle, or fast and quick?
“A. — Fast and quick.
“Q. — How high had the elevator got up when this man’s arm was hurt?
“A. — To the second floor, and then it went right down again.
“Q. — You mean the floor above the ground?
“A. — Yes, sir.
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104 La. 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russo-v-morris-building-land-improvement-assn-la-1900.