Wells v. Joslin Manufacturing Co.

82 A. 258, 33 R.I. 498, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 11, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 82 A. 258 (Wells v. Joslin Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Joslin Manufacturing Co., 82 A. 258, 33 R.I. 498, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 103 (R.I. 1912).

Opinion

Dubois, C. J.

This is an action of trespass on the case for negligence brought in the Superior Court wherein the defendant’s demurrer to each count of the plaintiff’s second amended declaration was sustained and the case was brought to this court upon the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions to the said ruling of the Superior Court. Said declaration contains four counts and sets forth in each count that the plaintiff on January 5th, 1909, was in the employ of the defendant in its business by it carried on at Rockland, in the town of Scituate and State of Rhode Island, and in the course of his employment made use of a certain elevator used in the business of the defendant for the purpose of carrying its employees and property from one floor to another in its manufactory, which elevator passed through openings in the floors of the building and an addition thereto, the floors of said structures being on different levels, and that there was no protection at the back of said elevator, which was of the platform type, and when the front of said elevator was stopped at the floor of the addition, it left the back of the elevator at the building unprotected and that the defendant not knowing of the unprotected condition at the back part of the elevator, moved to one side to allow another employee who was on said elevator, to step around the back of the same, and he fell off and was injured.

The first count sets forth the duty of the defendant to protect the end of the elevator opposite to the part resting. against the floor at which it was stopped, with a suitable gate, guard,-wall or other device, and that it neglected so to do.

In the second count the plaintiff alleges that the duty of the defendant was to notify and inform him that the end of the elevator opposite to the part resting against the floor at which it was stopped, was not protected with a suitable gate, guard, wall or other device and avers failure to give such notice.

*500 The third count charges that it was the duty of the defendant to furnish a safe and properly protected elevator to carry its employees and property from one floor to another and alleges the failure of the defendant so to do.

The fourth count alleges the duty of said defendant to furnish safe and suitable appliances to carry its employees from one floor to another and alleges that said defendant neglected so to do.

In each of the counts the plaintiff alleges his ignorance of these conditions and the exercise of due care on his part.

The substance of the - demurrer is as follows: (1) It does not appear that defendant was guilty of any negligence. (2) The fact that the floors of said building and addition were not on a level with each other was perfectly obvious to the plaintiff. (3) The fact that the rear end of the elevator when it was stopped was entirely unprotected either by gate, guard, wall or other device in the back of the same, was perfectly obvious to the plaintiff. (4) The plaintiff assumed the risk. (5) Defendant was not guilty of negligence in not having the rear end of its elevator protected by gate, guard, wall or other device. (6) The plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. (7) That it was. not the duty of the defendant to inform the plaintiff that the end of the elevator opposite the part resting against the floor at which it was stopped, was unprotected by any gate, guard, wall or other device and of the danger of stepping over the edge thereof.

(1) From the above description of the elevator we infer that, it was a platform freight elevator adapted to the reception and discharge of freight on either of its sides when and as-the same reached the level of any floor of the main building or of any floor of the addition thereto in its progress up or down, through the openings in the floors of said structures made for that purpose. There is nothing in the description of the elevator to warrant the inference that there was anything complicated about its construction or that it was any more than a movable platform that could be raised or- *501 lowered as occasion should require. Whether this was accomplished by means of a cable attached to its top, or of a plunger connected underneath it, or what its mechanism and motive power was does not appear. The simpler the construction the more easily it could be understood, by a person of full age and ordinary intelligence even in the casual inspection usually bestowed upon such vehicles by any one about to trust himself upon the same. The fact that its sides were open and unobstructed would be perfectly apparent unless the same were concealed or obscured in some manner, and there is no allegation to that effect. There would be no need of informing any person of full age and in the full possession of his faculties of anything that he could discover for himself by the exercise of his faculties in an ordinarily prudent manner. He is presumed to have been informed of all the conditions and circumstances existing at the time that he could have ascertained by the ordinary exercise of his senses. It is not alleged that this was his first trip on the elevator. He does not state how long he had been employed in the factory or how many times he had occasion to use the elevator. Why he did not know that the floors of the main building were not on the same level as the floors of its annex or addition does not appear. It would seem as though ordinary observation should have disclosed the existence of such a condition.

(2) The plaintiff also claims that “In a declaration charging negligence in the improper management or equipment of an elevator, but not containing any charge of a violation of the statute relating to elevators if thejuryfindonthe trial of the case that a non-compliance with this statute was the conducing cause of the accident, this of itself would be sufficient evidence of negligence, and it is for the jury to determine the weight thereof,” and cites the following cases in support of the above doctrine: Bullock v. Butler Exchange Co., 24 R. I. 50; Weeks v. Fletcher, 29 R. I. 112.

*502 (3) (4) *501 It is to be observed that the declaration in the case of Weeks v. Fletcher, supra, does contain averments alleging *502 violations of statutory requirements and therefore is hardly a case in point. In the case of Bullock v. Butler Exchange Co., supra, at page 57, the following charge of the judge presiding at the trial was approved: "I charge you gentlemen, that the plaintiff had the right to assume that the provisions of the law have been complied with and that that car could not start up or down so long as the doors remain open.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 258, 33 R.I. 498, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-joslin-manufacturing-co-ri-1912.