Appellant engaged McKeefrey to move a safe. The latter sent his foreman, McKnight, appellee's husband, and a helper, to do the work. The safe was on the seventh floor of appellant's building and was to be taken thence to the ground floor by means of an elevator. Kemble, chief engineer of appellant, acted as the operator. When the elevator reached the lower floor, Kemble, at McKnight's direction, placed it two inches below the level of that floor. Skids were then placed under the safe, and as McKnight and the helper were in the act first two wheels were in the hall, the elevator ascended from eight to twelve inches, and tilted the safe over, of pushing it into the five-foot corridor, as soon as the crushing McKnight so that he died shortly afterward from the injuries. The safe was five feet high and weighed 2,000 pounds. Appellee, decedent's widow, sued to recover damages; and from the award in her favor, confirmed by the court below, this appeal is taken.
In Pennsylvania the owner of a passenger elevator is held to the highest degree of care in the construction, maintenance and operation of its elevator in protecting from danger persons carried thereon. He is not an insurer of the passenger's safety but his liability for injury is similar to that of a common carrier: Fox v. Phila., 208 Pa. 127; Riland v. Hirshler, 7 Pa. Super. 384. This rule is also adopted in other states: Champagne v. Hamburger Sons, Inc., 169 Cal. 683,147 P. 954; Steiskal v. Field, 238 Ill. 92, 87 N.E. 117. Others hold to the standard of ordinary care: *Page 493 Griffen v. Manice, 166 N.Y. 188, 59 N.E. 925; McGrell v. Buffalo Office Bldg. Co., 153 N.Y. 265, 47 N.E. 305; Edwards v. Manufacturing Co., 27 R.I. 248; McCracken v. Meyers, 75 N.J.L. 935; Burgess v. Stowe, 134 Mich. 204, 96 N.W. 29. But the doctrine in Pennsylvania is in accord with the great weight of authority: 2 L.R.A. (N.S.) 744; 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 290. Some of the states holding a different view have applied the presumption of negligence theory: see Griffen v. Manice, supra; Edwards v. Manufacturing Co., supra. The rule adopted in this State as to passenger elevators has been applied in other jurisdictions to the owners of freight elevators who permit persons to ride thereon, (Springer v. Ford, 189 Ill. 430,59 N.E. 953; Orcutt v. Century Building, 201 Mo. 424,99 S.W. 1062), as in the case of "a stockman, accompanying his stock, riding in the caboose of a freight train."
In Fox v. Philadelphia, supra, where a witness in attendance at court had been crushed to death by an elevator and the charge of negligence consisted in a failure of a locking device to work, this court said: "Whether this evidence was sufficient for the purpose for which it was offered we need not decide, for the plaintiffs were not called upon for specific proof that the city had been negligent. Their case was for the jury when they showed their father had been crushed to death by the elevator through no fault or negligence on his part, and it was for the defendant to rebut the contention that it had been negligent." The court then stated the duty of common carriers to protect passengers as follows: "The slightest neglect against which human prudence and foresight may guard, and by which hurt or loss is occasioned, will render them liable to answer in damages. Nay, the mere happening of an injurious accident, raises prima facie a presumption of neglect, and throws upon the carrier the onus of showing it did not exist." This presumption may of course be rebutted by showing the accident was one which the utmost skill, foresight and *Page 494 diligence could not have prevented: Meier v. Penna. R. R. Co.,64 Pa. 225; Laing v. Colder, 8 Pa. 479. The court goes on at some length to justify the conclusion thus reached, holding that the owner was bound not only to provide safe and suitable cars, appliances and machinery for motion and control, but also to exercise the strictest care in managing these means of transportation: see Treadwell v. Whittier, 80 Cal. 574,22 P. 266; Hartford Deposit Co. v. Sollitt, 172 Ill. 222,15 N.E. 178, and cases first above cited.
Since the owner of an elevator is not the insurer of the safety of persons carried on the elevator, the burden of proving negligence is on the plaintiff. In this, as stated in Fox v. Phila., supra, and in Riland v. Hirshler, supra, he is aided by a presumption of negligence similar to that arising in the case of common carriers. Where that which causes the injury is under the sole management and control of the owner or his representative, and is an agency wherein the slightest negligence will be followed by injuries of the most frightful consequences to those within the agency, who are utterly ignorant of what ought to be done for their safety and in a position of passive helplessness, and an accident happens that in the ordinary course would not happen had those in control used proper care or which human knowledge, skill and foresight could have guarded against, it affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of an explanation, that the accident happened as a result of the want of care: 9 Rawle C. L. 1259; 10 C. J. 1039. Those who use elevators (and they number a large percentage of the people) are absolutely at the mercy of the owners and operators, and are entitled to the benefit of this rigid rule of law where an injury occurs either through the operation of the car, defect in its machinery or improper maintenance of its parts.
When McKnight and his helper were in the act of pushing the safe from the car, Kemble, at the moment of the accident, was on the elevator with his hand on *Page 495 the cable that operated the car. This was the fair effect of appellant's evidence and the jury could well infer that some act of his caused the car to move. He had control of the only device that could keep the elevator stationary or cause it to move. This too appears from the evidence. Kemble, as appellant's witness, denied that he was on the car, and stated that, when the car reached the ground floor, he locked it so that it could not move, and stepped off to the corridor. We need not discuss his act in leaving the car with a passenger on it, a heavy object to be moved off, and someone on the outside to assist in moving it; but even if his statement is true, he could not have locked the safety device that held the car, or else it was defective. Otherwise the car would have remained stationary, which it did not do. This evidence, however, was clearly for the jury, and their finding was adverse to appellant's contention.
It cannot be doubted that McKnight was a passenger while riding on the elevator, and it is equally clear that the relation does not cease at the moment the passenger starts to leave the car: Harvey v. Proctor, 58 A.D. 139,142 N.Y. S. 769. Where one has alighted from an elevator but is engaged as deceased was in direct connection with or relation to the car, and by some non-negligent act of his is injured, he has not lost his identity as a passenger, and the duty of the carrier still exists: Fox v. Phila., supra.
The statement of claim charges that the elevator was in appellant's control and that it was "negligently allowed to move upward" so that the safe was tilted forward causing the death of appellee's husband. The specific act which caused the car to move is not stated with particularity, and any negligent act of appellant which "allowed it to move upward" was competent proof of the charge. The court below permitted evidence of other causes to be introduced which appellant says were not germane to the issues raised in the pleadings. It is true plaintiff may waive the right to invoke a presumption of *Page 496 negligence, by pleading specific acts of negligence as the cause of the injury: Orcutt v. Century Building, supra. But in this case the averment amounted to a general charge of negligence. An examination of the record shows that all evidence offered as to the causes of the accident had a definite relation to the charge of "negligently allowing the elevator to move upward." If appellant felt it was entitled to have the causes set forth more specifically in the pleadings it should have taken proceedings to that end.
Nor without more would we consider an independent contractor or his servant a fellow servant with one aiding him, who is employed by the person procuring the work to be done and on whose premises the work is done.
Appellant had engaged McKeefrey to move the safe, and McKnight was his foreman. To say that Kemble was a servant of McKnight would not establish a fellow servant relation to this appellant. The latter would not be the employer. It is not established by the evidence that Kemble was in the special employ of McKnight, and if an injury to a third person had occurred through McKnight's negligence in the course of his employment, McKeefrey and not the appellant would have been liable.
"Where a servant works side by side with one employed by his master as an independent contractor, or the latter's servant works with the servant of a subcontractor, they are not fellow servants even though they helped to do the same work for the benefit of the same ultimate employer": Grogan v. Hinkle Co.,70 Pa. Super. 585, 587. There may be circumstances where the relation of fellow servants exists by one employee being loaned to another (Tarr v. Hecla Coal and Coke Co., 265 Pa. 519), but they are not present in this case. McKnight was bound to perform the particular piece of work for his master McKeefrey. Kemble's relation to it and McKnight to Kemble came through the use and operation of the elevator. But this use and *Page 497 operation was no more than the ordinary use and the performance of the ordinary duties which his master, this appellant, required of the service Kemble was temporarily engaged in. This service was for McKnight or any one having business with appellant. It was the duty of appellant, using generally such appliances in connection with his business, to furnish the elevator service, and he could neither delegate nor permit someone else to delegate this duty to others so as to relieve him from responsibility: Sciolara v. Asch, 198 N.Y. 77,91 N.E. 263, 32 L.R.A. (N.S.) 945. The safe was appellant's property being moved on its elevator operated by Kemble, its chief engineer, who had complete control of the instrumentality which caused the death. That McKnight was not a fellow servant with Kemble of appellant is fully demonstrated by Justice SCHAFFER'S opinion in Eckert v. Ship Building Corp., 280 Pa. 340. For the reasons given, the rule applicable in cases of fellow servants (Spees v. Boggs, 198 Pa. 112) injured in elevators does not apply.
In unloading the safe, McKnight placed himself in front of it while his helper stood at the rear and pushed it forward and by their combined efforts the safe was to be forced into the corridor. McKnight's position became dangerous when the elevator moved upward; the trial judge was of opinion he was not guilty of contributory negligence by standing in front of the safe aiding in its removal. We agree that his position was not one of such obvious danger that the court could declare it so as a matter of law. He was not bound to foresee or even remotely anticipate the negligent act of appellant. Had the safe been on a second or intermediate floor and descended, the man who stood in the car would have been subject to the same danger as McKnight. The question of contributory negligence was fairly for the jury.
The judge in charging the jury mentioned the weight of the safe and the capacity of the elevator. Objection *Page 498 was taken to this by counsel and the court in effect told the jury to disregard the statement, if there was no evidence to support it. This was not error.
All the assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.