Snyder v. Witwer Bros.

RobiwsoN, J.

The defendants, B. H. Witwer and H. E. Witwer, are copartners in the wholesale grocery business, under the firm-name of Witwer Bros. In May, 1888, they were carrying on said business at Cedar Rapids. The ground floor of the building they occupied had at one time been separated into two rooms by a brick wall, each of which was about nineteen feet wide and one hundred and forty feet long. At the time in question that wall had been pierced, and one door and five archways had been made therein, each archway being eight feet wide. and nine feet high, and the two rooms were used together as one. They extended lengthwise from east to west, and fronted westward. In the east end of each were a door and two windows. The south room was divided into two nearly equal parts by a wall, which extended from north to south. In that wall there was an archway about ten feet wide and nine and a half feet high. A few feet east of that wall there was a door in the south wall of the biiilding. Pour of the archways in the wall which separated the two main rooms were east of the cross wall we have described. The north wall of the north room was unbroken, and the same was true of the south wall of the south room, excepting by the door mentioned. In the north room opposite the third archway from the east end was a freight elevator, the hatchway for which opened into the cellar. The south line of that hatchway was the north line of the wall which was pierced by the archway. Posts at the corners of the hatchway extended from the floor to the ceiling. Boards were nailed on those on the east side to a height .of three or more feet, a barrier was fastened to those on the west side, and the space between those on the north side was closed by a picket *654gate. The space on the south side was furnished with a bar, the east end of which was hinged a few feet above the floor. The west end was free and arranged to be placed in a notch in the west post, or to be dropped to the floor. The hatchway was a little more than thirty feet from the east end of the room. On the south side of the north room, between the hatchway and the east end, was a stairway, open, exceed near the bottom, without risers. Quantities of merchandise were stored in the two rooms in such manner as to leave passageways in various directions.

On the morning of the thirty-first day of May, 1888, the plaintiff went into the office of the defendants, which was located in the west end of the south room, for the purpose of making a purchase. He was told by one of the defendants that employes in the back part of the store would wait on him. Tie left the office, and went eastward in the south room, until nearly opposite the elevator archway, when he turned northward to go through it, for the purjjose of speaking to a clerk who was at work in that vicinity. The elevator was in the second story at the time. The bar on the south side was ■down at the west end. The plaintiff walked into the unprotected opening, fell to the cellar floor, and received the injuries of which he complains. He claims that he was injured, without fault on his part, in consequence •of the negligence of the defendants in permitting the hatchway to remain unguarded and unlighted. The •defendants deny negligence and liability on their part.

The appellants insist, and there was evidence which tended to show, that the plaintiff knew of the •elevator and its location at the time of the accident; that when it happened the weather was clear, and the light from the doors and windows we have described wao ample to disclose to anyone having ordinary eyesight and using reasonable care the hatchway and its condition ; that the accident to the plaintiff and the consequent injuries resulted from his own want of ordinary and reasonable care. The plaintiff insists, and so testified, in substance, that the light in the vicinity of *655the hatchway was dim ; that the stairway, piles of merchandise and other objects so obstructed the light that ■the hatchway could not be seen by the use of ordinary -care ; that he did not know of its existence, and did not :see it, until he fell through it, although he was using -due care at the time.

It thus appeared that a controlling question in the •case was whether, at the time of the accident, there wns ■sufficient light at and about the hatchway to enable a person exercising due care to see it. A witness named Mateer testified for the defendants that he was at the elevator immediately after the accident; that he was there after the plaintiff'was brought up from the cellar, ■and while he was lying on the floor near the elevator.After testifying as to the surroundings, he was asked the following questions: “At the time you got there, .just after the accident, tell the jury whether or not there was any difficulty in seeing the locality of this ■elevator opening, and where it was.” “At the time you stood there at the elevator opening, tell the jury whether or not there was sufficient light thrown around the elevator to enable its location and situation to be readily seen or not.” Objections to each question were ■sustained. Somewhat similar questions were asked of ■other witnesses for the defendants, to which objections were also sustained. Afterwards, a witness for the plaintiff named Calder testified that he was at the scene •of the accident after the plaintiff had been brought from the cellar, and that he saw where he had fallen in. • He was then asked the following question: “You may ■state whether there was sufficient light at that time to see the hole.” Objection was made to the question, but he was permitted, to answer: “No sir; I don’t think it was.” We think this ruling was in conflict with that which excluded the testimony of Mateer, .and that the latter was erroneous. Whether there was sufficient light to enable a person using ordinary •care to see the hatchway, was a question of fact, which it was competent to prove by the statement of witnesses who had tested it. Their testimony may *656have been somewhat in the nature of conclusions, but from the character of the case it was necessarily so, and was more satisfactory than a mere showing as to. the location and condition of the doors and windows, the height and location of piles of merchandise, and other facts from which the jury might have drawn a conclusion as to the condition of the light. A knowledge of all such facts might well have left the jury in doubt as to whether the hatchway could have been readily seen. The light was not wholly excluded from the rooms, and its strength could best be told by actual experiments. Care should be taken to have the experiments apply to the conditions as to light under which the accident happened, so far as practicable. Mateer arrived at the elevator before Calder, and made his examination as it is claimed, while the light was the same that it was when the plaintiff fell into the cellar, while it is claimed that the east door of the north room, open at that time, had been closed when Calder arrived. While it was proper for the witnesses to testify as to what they could see, the value of their testimony might have been tested by considering the surroundings, changes in conditions, and differences in points of observation and in eyesight.

The plaintiff claims that the evidence rejected was cumulative merely; therefore, that a new trial should not be granted on account of it. The authorities cited in support of that claim refer to newly-discovered evidence as a ground for a new trial, and have no application to the case under consideration. The defendants were entitled to have all relevant and competent testimony offered by them received and considered by the jury in weighing the evidence. The presumption of the law that they were prejudiced by the rulings in question finds ample support in the record.

What we have said disposes of the controlling questions in the case. Others are discussed, but, as they may not arise on another trial, they need not be determined.

For the reasons indicated the judgment of the district Court ÍS REVERSED.