Shattuck v. Rand

Decision Date27 May 1886
Citation7 N.E. 43,142 Mass. 83
PartiesSHATTUCK v. RAND.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

N. Morse and H.G. Allen, for plaintiff.

W Gaston and D.C. Linscott, for defendant.

OPINION

GARDNER J.

The defendant offered evidence tending to show that, immediately after the accident, the builder of the elevator examined its machinery, valves, and connections, and found them in perfect order, and nothing broken or injured, that he had examined the shut-off valve in the cellar, from time to time, and had always found it in perfect order. The defendant called certain experts, who testified, in substance, that all appliances for safety in general use were connected with this elevator, and were in good working order; that there were no appliances known to them to prevent air from getting into cylinders when the street-pipe was opened, except such as were attached to this machine; that the closing of the shut-off valve in the cellar would have no effect on the running of the elevator, as the pipe between it and the cylinders would remain full of water all the time, whether closed or open, owing to the fact that the cellar pipe was lower than the street-main; and that they did not consider there was any danger to hydraulic elevators from opening the street-mains. Among other prayers for instructions, the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that "if the elevator had all known safety appliances, and defendant had no knowledge or reasonable cause to believe that there was any danger from air coming from the street-pipe, and an accident happened therefrom, he would not be liable, even if he had knowledge that the water was being shut off." The court refused so to instruct the jury.

The defendant had introduced evidence tending to show that the fall of the elevator was not attributable to any negligence on the part of the defendant, and that he was not responsible therefor, for the reasons assigned in his prayer for instructions. Although this prayer was defective in the form in which it was presented, it sufficiently informed the court of the law upon which he relied for defense. The attention of the jury should have been called to this claim of the defendant, and the law given them governing the case upon this evidence. If the accident happened from the shutting off the water from the street main, and if there was nothing to put a man of reasonable intelligence and...

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