
    Therese Murphy, as Administratrix, etc., App’lt, v. Frank K. Hayes et al., Resp’ts.
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed March 19, 1895.)
    
    Negligence—Elbvatob.
    The owner of an elevator is not liable to an employe of a safe companyr who was injured in assisting to remove a safe from the elevator, when such elevator is of the best construction and does its work properly, and his injury was the result of his own and his co-servants’ negligence.
    Appeal from judgment of the general term of the supreme court in the first judicial department, entered upon an order which affirmed a judgment in favor of defendants entered upon an order of the court on trial at circuit dismissing the corciplaint.
    G. Washbourne Smith, for app’lt; Charles C. Nadal and Thomas S. Moore, for resp’ts.
   Haight, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the death of Patrick Murphy, the plaintiff’s intestate, caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the defendants.

Patrick Murphy with several others, was in the employ of the Marvin Safe Company, engaged in moving a safe weighing nine thousand three hundred pounds into the defendants’ building on Maiden lane, in the city of New York, for one of the defendants’ tenants therein/ There were two elevators in the building opposite each other on the main hall, one of which was constructed for carrying heavy freight as well as passengers. The safe .was run into the hall on the first floor and placed upon the freight elevator. The engineer of the building was then given an order to go ahead, and thereupon he applied the power and raised the car containing the safe to the seventh floor of the building, where it was to be removed and placed in the tenant’s office. After the elevator had arrived at the floor of its destination the servants of the Marvin Safe Company placed two iron shoes under the front edge of the car. They consisted of two broad pieces of iron, which extended beneath the floor of the car with a double angle which projected out into the hallway. The elevator was then lowered upon the shoes, and two of the employees of the Marvin Safe Company went into the car behind the safe to assist in pushing it out into the hall. As they entered the car the rear portion thereof commenced to sag down, and they called out to raise the car-up. A janitor in the defendants’ employ, standing by, hallooed down the elevator shaft to the engineer to “raise her a turn; give her a turn.” Thereupon the car was raised up even with the floor. He then shouted down the shaft: “Stop and hold the pressure on° and keep her in place.” The car then remained steady, the servants of the safe company took hold of the safe and pushed it out. As soon as they got it about half way out on to the floor of the hall the elevator commenced to raise, and rose gradually for the space of about three feet, tipping the safe over on to its face in the hall. The plaintiff’s intestate, being in front of the safe, was thrown over into the opposite elevator shaft, fell and was killed.

We think there can be no reasonable doubt as to the cause of the accident. The inferences to be drawn from the facts would have justified the jury in finding that the car was held in position, even with the floor of the building, through the power maintained upon the elevator by the engineer in the basement below, and as soon as the elevator was relieved in part of the great weight of the safe the car commenced to rise, because of such power, causing the safe to tip forward.

Who was at fault? Was it the defendant’s engineer ? Manifestly not. He was in the basement below operating the elevator according to orders received from above. He could not see or know what they were doing with the safe, or the manner in which they were removing it from the car of the elevator. He apparently obeyed the orders given him, and we discover nothing in his acts that can properly be made the subject of criticism.

Was it the janitor? He was charged with no duty with reference to the moving of the safe. So far as appears he was but a volunteer. When the men inside of the car called out to “ raise her up,” after finding that the rear of the car was sagging down, he shouted their orders down through the elevator shaft to the engineer. It is true that, after the car was again raised even with the floor, he again shouted down to the engineer to keep the press-. ure on and hold the car in place. But this was done in a loud voice, in the presence of the servants of the safe company, including Murphy, and no objection was made thereto. The order was evidently proper. It had then been demonstrated that the shoes placed under the floor of the front of the car w.ere insufficient to hold it in place,-and power from beneath was required in order to keep it from sagging down in the rear. The janitor was not shown to have had experience or knowledge in the moving of safes, or to have taken any other responsibility, or given other orders with reference thereto.

Were the defendants negligent? There is no pretense that the elevator was not of the best construction, Or that it did not do its work properly. The only thing suggested is that they .did not have a man upon the elevator having hold of the rope so as to shut off the power as the safe was removed from the elevator-. But they were chargeable with no duty with reference -to the removal of the safe. They simply furnished the elevator operated by the engineer, with which to enable the Marvin Safe Company‘to effect the hoisting of the safe. The.capacity of the elevator was from four to five tons. The weight of the safe, as we have seen, was upwards of fohr tons and a half, nearly equal to the entire capacity of the elevator. The elevator could be operated by the engineer properly, under orders from above, and, under the circumstances, it may not have been deemed prudent to burden the elevator with the weight of an additional man. We consequently see no ground for charging the defendants with negligence.

Did .the accident result in consequence of the-negligence of the servants of the safe company ? Those servants were .engaged in the removal of the safe. They were accompanied by the foreman of the gang and the general foreman of the company, men who had had many years of experience in the moving of safes in the cities of New York, Brooklyn and Jersey City, and the taking of them up in elevators in high buildings. They -were fully aware of the difficulties and dangers attending the handling of safes of great weight, and understood the nature and character of the appliances necessary to be made use of in performing -such work. They knew that the shoes had proved insufficient to hold the car in place, and that they had placed no skid or other appliance across the elevator shaft to hold the car .in position. They knew that the elevator car was maintained in position upon the seventh floor ■of the building with this safe upon it, through power applied by the engineer in the basement below. They knew that there was no man upon the car having hold of the rope so as to reduce the power as the safe was removed. Yet knowing all this, they attempted to remove the safe from the elevator with the power on, without giving notice to the. engineer below, or directing him to reduce the power in case the elevator should commence to rise. In this, it appears to us, they were negligent, and such negligence caused the death of Murphy. They were his co-servants and co-laborers, he participating with them in negligently doing the work they had in cnarge.

It follows that the non-suit was proper, and that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur. Judgment affirmed.  