Simmons v. Peters

32 N.Y.S. 680, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 93, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 64
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 N.Y.S. 680 (Simmons v. Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Peters, 32 N.Y.S. 680, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 93, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 64 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

HARDIN, P. J.

Defendant was engaged in the manufacture of shirts on Noxson street, in the city of Syracuse, on the 7th of April, 1890, the business being under the supervision of her husband, Henry Peters. She occupied the first floor, and the whole of the second, third, and fourth floors. On the morning of April 7, 1890, which was a dark, rainy morning, Brown, one of defendant’s employés, having reached the store shortly after 7 o’clock, found the elevator door closed and locked. While he was unlocking the door, the plaintiff and, her two daughters and Miss Garthe and Miss Washner entered the building. They advanced towards the elevator, some 18-J feet distant from where they entered the building; and at that moment Brown called out to them to hurry, and he opened the elevator door, stepped inside, and reached for the cable, so as to bring the elevator car down, which was on the fourth floor. As he swung into the elevator, he seems to have been partially, if not wholly, out of sight of the plaintiff, who was then some 9 feet distant from him, and, when he reappeared, the plaintiff was some 4 or 5 feet distant from him. Brown was about 3 or 4 feet from the door when she walked in. Brown, on taking hold of the cable, discovered that the elevator was locked at the fourth floor; and as he turned and stood in the doorway, facing the women, with his back against the casing, his right hand was on the cable, and his left holding the door, which had closed against his arm. The door was open about 2-} feet. The plaintiff continued to walk steadily forward. Miss Garthe had a wet umbrella, and she jokingly spattered some drops of water on Brown, and he let go his hold upon the cable and the door, and turned from the elevator suddenly, took a step or two from the doorway, and seized the umbrella. The plaintiff, advancing, in the absence of gaslight, reached the elevator, stopped, and looked ahead, saw the door standing open, and, supposing that she saw the elevator car, walked in, and fell a distance of some 12 feet into the cellar, breaking her leg, from which resulted an amputation, and sustaining injuries for which this action was brought. The door stood about 2-£ feet open at the time she passed in. There was some evidence tending to show that the door was stuck on the uneven and worn shoulder. She had ridden upon the elevator on previous occasions, and on no occasion had she seen the door open, except when the elevator car was at the landing. She had in one hand, at the time she entered the building, a dinner box, and in the other a can of coffee, and did not herself touch the door. She had been accustomed to use the elevator with some 40 other women for approach to the fourth floor, where she was engaged in the performance of her duties, and apparently, from her experience and observation of such use, she supposed that, when the door was open, it indicated that the elevator car wras present. It appears in the evidence that the husband of the defendant had previously received a warning that the condition of the elevator door was defective. He was at that time acting as manager for his wife, and, as such, was carrying on the business, and he knew that the door did not have automatic attachments, and had seen the elevator door remain partly open on some occasions. There is no exact evidence as to the length of [682]*682time that elapsed from the moment when Brown stepped away from the door and the moment when plaintiff fell. There is evidence to the effect that, from the time Brown stepped out of the opening and the time when the plaintiff walked in, the- door remained in a stationary position, leaving an opening of about 2J feet, and that the door was stationary when the plaintiff passed into the opening.

In chapter 462 of the Laws of 1887, in section 8, it is provided as follows:

“It shall be the duty of the owner, agent or lessee of any manufacturing establishment where hoisting shafts or well holes are used,.to cause the same to be properly and substantially enclosed or secured, if in the option of the inspector it is necessary to protect the life or limbs of those employed in such establishments. It shall also be the duty of the owner, agent or lessee to provide or cause to be provided such proper trap or automatic doors, so fastened in or at all elevator ways as to form a substantial surface when closed, and so constructed as to open and close by action of the elevator in its passage, either ascending or descending.”

The evidence warranted a finding by the jury that the statute had not been complied) with by the defendant. Guetig, the factory inspector, who had been in the discharge of Ms duty upon the premises of the defendant, and made an examination of the door, testified as follows, viz.:

“I worked the door myself. It didn’t work. I opened it. It didn’t close when the elevator left it. It was not closed at the time, it was open, when I came there. * * * The door itself and its connections had no connection with the elevator. * * * An automatic door on an elevator is a door that works by the action of the elevator itself; either going up or coming down opens the elevator door when it strikes a landing, and closes it when it leaves it; a door which is governed and held in place by the action of the elevator in its motion, ascending or descending.”

The witness added:

“Then there are others that have trapdoors that open and shut * * * There always must be a weight to close them.”

The evidence shows that the defendant’s elevator door was hung by iron supports to wheels resting on the tracks, moving in grooves; the tracks inclined towards the shutting of the door; and that the door, if it followed the incline downward, would shut. It was about 6 feet in width, and 6-| to 7 feet high, and the sill was a solid board, grooved out so as to leave a shoulder on each side. Trucks were used on the ground floor for wheeling goods, and they were wheeled across the sills into the elevator, and they had slivered the shoulder, and worn it down, so that it had become uneven, rounded, and would allow the door to catch. “As the door approached being shut, it would gradually go down into these grooves, and, the shoulders being worn off, it didn’t run perfectly straight. It would catch on these shoulders, and stop. Instead of shutting, it would then stand partly open, without any one’s holding it.” That condition of things had existed some six months prior to the accident. It appeared .in the evidence that, “before the time of the accident, there was no person whose business it was to regulate the elevator regularly,” and that “there were no published or oral rules with reference to its operation.”

[683]*683Whether the defendant was guilty of negligence which contributed to the injury received by the plaintiff, and whether the plaintiff was free of contributory negligence, were questions of fact which should have been submitted to the jury. Freeman v. Paper Mill Co. (Sup.) 15 N. Y. Supp. 657; Tousey v. Roberts, 114 N. Y. 316, 21 N. E. 399; Peil v. Reinhart, 127 N. Y. 381, 27 N. E. 1077; Morrison v. Telegraph Co. (Sup.) 23 N. Y. Supp. 257. But it is contended by the respondent that the plaintiff assumed any risk that might be caused by the defects and insufficiencies of the approaches and appliances in and about the elevator. It appears by the evidence that she had been for some five months in the employ of the defendant, and had most of that time used the elevator in the morning and evening, as she had occasion to approach and leave the room on the fourth floor, where she was engaged in the performance of her duties for the defendant.

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32 A.D. 559 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y.S. 680, 92 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 93, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-peters-nysupct-1895.