The facts in this case, as they appeared at the first trial, are stated in a former opinion (78 Minn. 504, 81 N. W. 518), and as so stated do not differ particularly from those shown upon the second trial, in which plaintiff had a verdict, an appeal being taken from judgment thereon.
Defendant’s claim at this time is that on the evidence as received upon the trial it was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor, a motion to that effect having been made when the testimony closed. The law applicable to the facts here was laid down in the former opinion, and the court below, having then directed a verdict in defendant’s favor, was reversed for two reasons: First, because of its refusal to receive expert testimony offered by plaintiff’s counsel as to the required amount of training and experience necessary in order to qualify and render a man capable of running an elevator; second, because, on the whole evidence as to the exercise of ordinary or reasonable care in the selection of the man in question, the case was for the jury. At the second trial there was an abundance of expert testimony as to the requisite training and experience, both parties producing witnesses; and, as might be expected, there was a difference of opinion among these gentlemen. But, taking the whole testimony of these experts, defendant’s counsel assert that it is conclusively shown that defendant exercised ordinary and reasonable care and diligence when employing Mr. Hanft, and that there was no issue upon this point, and for this reason its motion should have been granted. It may be that the preponderance of evidence on this subject was with defendant, and to the effect that Hanft was sufficiently instructed when employed, and, with his subsequent experience prior to the accident, fully qualified to operate the elevator when plaintiff was injured. But on all of the testimony these questions were for the jury.
In passing, it is proper to say that in the former opinion it was .stated that defendant’s engineer, Hanft’s brother, reported to its *118agent in charge of the building, prior to the employment, that Hanft could do the work required. The agent so testified at- the first trial, and there was no contradiction. The agent also testified to this at the second trial, but the engineer emphatically defied that he had made such a report to the agent, and at the second trial this same engineer admitted that Hanft “got a little rattled when the car went a little too fast.”
It was alleged in the complaint that Hanft suddenly and violently started the elevator upward with great force and rapidity, by reason of which plaintiff was unable to enter the same, and, further, that Hanft then carelessly and negligently stopped and suddenly lowered it for a short distance; while the proof was that the elevator was violently started upward, was then stopped very suddenly, and was then again moved upward with great rapidity. The witnesses did not state the movement of the elevator precisely as alleged in the complaint, and because of this discrepancy it is argued by counsel for defendant that there was a fatal variance between the complaint and the proof, which should have prevented the plaintiff from recovering. This variance was not material. It was very slight, and in.no manner could it have misled counsel, or have been prejudicial to defendant. The trial court was at liberty to and very properly did disregard it. G-. S. 189-1, §§ 5262, 5263.
It is also urged by counsel that from the testimony it clearly appears that Hanft and the plaintiff were not acting within the scope of their employment when using the elevator at the time of the accident, nor under circumstances which would render defendant liable for injuries sustained; and that the case is one of an unauthorized use of an elevator by employees for their own convenience simply. We have examined the charge of the court, together with defendant’s requests for instructions, all made verbally, and immediately prior to the charge, and this point was not alluded to in any manner. There was no request to instruct upon it, and, if considered important, the attention of the court should have been directly called thereto, which was not done. This, of itself, is sufficient reason for disregarding this claim, made for the first time upon appeal.
*119But, going beyond this, it is true that the testimony shows that, according to the rules of the building, the elevators stopped running at 12.30 a. m. It is also true that during the trial, and in response to an objection made to certain questions by plaintiff’s counsel, attention was called to the general denial in the answer, and the claim was then made that under this denial it was competent to show that under the rules the use of the elevator by employees was unauthorizéd at the time of the accident. But no further attention seems to have been paid to the point by defendant’s counsel, and no stress was laid upon it. It seems to have been abandoned then and there. That it was not regarded as of importance is made clear by the fact that during the trial the plaintiff’s counsel attempted to show that defendant’s employees, including the plaintiff, were permitted to use the elevators at all times when thejr were at work and had occasion to' use them. This was objected to by defendant upon the ground that testimony upon this point was inadmissible, except as an affirmative defense to be introduced by defendant itself. Nor was it plainly shown thát this accident occurred after the time at which, according to the rules referred to, the elevator should have ceased running. The plaintiff was injured about 12 p. m. In addition to this, it was conclusively established by the proofs that it was absolutely necessary for Hanft to use the elevator to do the very work in which he was engaged at the time he was called down from the floor above, and that he had habitually used it at such work. We think it very clearly appears that all of the defendant’s employees involved in the accident were properly engaged in defendant’s service, within the scope of their employment, when the accident happened, rather than in any independent enterprise of their own.
We conclude that the defendant has been wholly unsuccessful in distinguishing the present appeal from the former one, and that upon all of these questions of’fact the case was more clearly one for the jury than it was when tried the first time.
Judgment affirmed.