State Ex Rel. Ducas v. Bernheimer

99 A. 365, 129 Md. 341, 1916 Md. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 99 A. 365 (State Ex Rel. Ducas v. Bernheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Ducas v. Bernheimer, 99 A. 365, 129 Md. 341, 1916 Md. LEXIS 152 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the State to the use of the mother of Peter Ducas, a fifteen year old boy, against the appellees to recover damages for the death of said infant which it is alleged was caused by the negligence of the defendants. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the trial Court directed a verdict for the defendants, and this appeal was taken from the judgment entered on the verdict. There are certain uncontradicted facts appearing in the record which will now be stated.

Bemheimer Brothers, the appellees, conduct a large store in Baltimore. This store, which consists of two buildings, fronts on Lexington street and extends south to Fayette street, with a front also on that street. The Fayette street portion of the store is connected on the second floor with the Lexington street portion by a bridge across an alley, which runs east and west, separating the two buildings, spolcen of in the evidence as Marion street. About the center of what Ave shall designate as the Lexington street building and against the Marion street wall the defendants installed and have been using in their business a freight elevator. The entrance to the elevator on the second floor was by a sliding wooden door with no opening in it. This: door was about six or seA^en feet high, and to reach the elevator from the second floor it was necessary to raise, or slide up this door. On the second floor near the elevator door, on the night the boy was killed, there were some are lights burning. There was no fixed light in the elevator shaft, but when the door of the elevator on the second floor1 was raised the light from the lamps men *343 tioned was thrown into the' shaft, and there was also some light thrown into it through a window in the elevator shaft near the door.

Peter Tineas was in the employ of the defendants. He had been working on the sixth floor of the Fayette street building, hut for the two or three months preceding the accident he had been working on the second floor of the Fayette street building as a stock hoy under Joseph E. Burke, who had charge of that floor. It was not a part of the duty of Peter TTueas to run the elevator, and he was not directed to do so. The defendants had an employee to operate the elevator, hut at the time of the injury and .for an hour or so preceding it ho was off that particular duty. The boys in the store were allowed to use the elevators in the building, but not to run them.

On the night of January 10, 1914-, Mr. Burke instructed Peter .Ducas to take some shirt waists from the second floor of the Fayette street building to the first floor of the Lexington street building. The boy put the shirtwaists on a truck and wheeled-them over to the elevator, where he took some of the waists off of the truck. What then occurred is testified to by the only two witnesses who saw the accident, viz., Barney B. Barr and Ralph Sachs. We hero quote from the testimony of Mr. Barr: “The witness was present when the accident occurred oil Saturday night between 9:30 and a quarter to ten; he was leaning against a counter in the shoe department; he had seen the boy coming across with the truck I guess to be taken downstairs; and he had placed the truck outside of the candy counter, which is in front of the elevator, and went around to open the door to bring: the elevator up; be bad opened the door and placed the door on bis shoulder and lie pulled the rope which naturally brings the elevator up; there was a young girl in the candy department at that time yelled at the boy and told him to close that door, that it was cold up here, and Mr. Sachs, who was manager, heard that, and told the boy to close that door and naturally that *344 boy had turned around to hear Mr. Sachs, and the elevator had come up at the time and caught him right in his chest and took him up. -with the door; this girl had seen it and yelled and everybody naturally looked up and seen what it was and seen his feet hanging’, and somebody -went over and pulled the, rope; he didn’t know who; and he stopped the elevator; ho was caught between the second and third floor.”

When the; elevator was stopped the hoy was dead. His body was jammed between the door and the elevator. The witness Knighton said: “Nobody was on the elevator but the hoy at the time when it was up to the top with him jammed in there. His head and shoulders were on the waiter. He had his eoa.t on. The door held him on his hack. He could not get up any other way. His breast was on the floor of the waiter and the door on his hack. His head and breast were both on the elevator and the door of course covered his hack.”

The testimony of Ralph Sachs, who was the floor manager on the Lexington street side, corroborated that of Barr in some particulars, hut in others, is confused and a. little difficult to understand. He testified that he saw' the hoy lift the elevator door. That it was a stormy night and that one of the girls, in the department- said, “for Heaven’s sake, get that door down, a draft is coming through. I said, turning to the hoy, for Heaven’s, sake put down that door.” He said that the hoy instead of putting the door down, lifted the door up and got hack of it, when I said, he careful, or something like that, T don’t remember what—he gets hold of the check rope and gets the door in hack of him and the check rope, and the elevator comes up with it, and he is caught on the inside of the door with the check rope in his. hand. The, hoy had a check rope, it could, not have been possibly more than a, minute that- the place was open before the people called; witness is absolutely positive that the hoy put his hand on the rope.

“Q. You told him to close the door, hut he didn’t have to . get underneath it, did he? A. No, sir; you could close the *345 door without taking hold of tho chock; it come down with a bang. Q. Was the elevator coming up at that time ? A. The elevator was not coining up until he attempted to use the check rope. Q. Why did he use the rope: ? A. For the simple reason when he saw his life was in danger he tried to get hold of the rope to keep, himself from falling. Q. What put his life in danger before he caught, the rope ? A. Getting back of the door; lie had no way to support himself. Q. What kind a door1 was. it, a door that went up. and down ? A. A door sliding up and clown, a groat big door,( wooden frame going up and down. Q. How did he get back of that door when ho closed it? A. I didn’t say that; I said in attempting to go back and close the door instead of getting in front he goes back of the door and gets the check rope up and lie was wedged in back of the door and elevator, Q. Tou told him to close the door; that is your first statement? A. Yes; that is my statement. Q. Are you sure you. didn’t tell him to go inside and close the door? A. Absolutely not. Q. You say lie got inside the door; how? A. Ho simply got underneath the door, 1 suppose like most foolish boys playfully got underneath the door, and when he saw the possibility of him falling down into that pit,’the elevator was then at; the bottom, he got hold of the check.”

The foundation of the plaintiff’s claim is that tlie death of the boy was due to the negligence of the defendants. Before there could lie a recovery the plaintiff was required to allege and prove a breach of duty on the part of the defendants and that- the death resulted from that negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 365, 129 Md. 341, 1916 Md. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ducas-v-bernheimer-md-1916.