Andrzejewski v. Hill

161 Ill. App. 376, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 751
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 4, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,165
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 161 Ill. App. 376 (Andrzejewski v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrzejewski v. Hill, 161 Ill. App. 376, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 751 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The judgment to reverse which this writ of error was sued out is for $7,000. It was rendered in a suit for - a very, serious injury suffered by the plaintiff Andrzejewski while in the employment of the defendant., T. E. Hill, as a laborer. He claimed in the first count of his declaration as it finally went to the jury, that the defendant’s negligence caused the accident, in that the defendant directed the plaintiff to work near, about and upon a certain platform, which platform was of such height and construction as to he dangerously near to moving machinery used in the conveyance of materials, and described as a certain boom and conveyor, together with certain chains, cables, pulleys and devices attached thereto, which devices were then and there operated by the defendant by steam power. The declaration further alleges that because of the plaintiff’s attention being engrossed by the performance of his duties he was unable to observe the movements of said machinery and to guard against the same. The gist of the first count is that the injury occurred by a default of the defendant in his duty to use reasonable care to supply the plaintiff with a safe place to work.

In the second count, after stating his employment as a laborer for the defendant to aid and assist in the management of the appliances and devices before stated, and in the removal of material by means of them, the plaintiff alleged that although he was ignorant of the intricacies of such machinery and devices, the defendant failed to warn and instruct him relative to the same, and while he (the plaintiff) was engaged on September 2,1904, “in obedience to the defendant’s orders and in the exercise of due care in the performance of his usual duties near and about said boom, cables, pulleys and shives,” the defendant without notice to him “changed the movement of said machinery, boom and appliances so as to cause the same, or certain portions thereof, to strike the plaintiff a severe and violent blow,” to his great, severe and permanent injury.

There were, in the finally amended declaration which took the place of the former ones and was filed by leave of court after the jury was empaneled, four counts, but the third and fourth were withdrawn from the jury by a peremptory instruction at the close of all the evidence to find the defendant not guilty thereon. The two counts above abstracted are to be assumed, therefore, to have been alone considered by the jury.

While the gist of the first one is the allegation of the failure of the defendant to use reasonable care to supply the plaintiff with a safe place to work, that of the second is a statement which we interpret to mean that the defendant without signal or notice to the plaintiff so changed the position of and so moved the boom which struck him that it inflicted the injury, and that this, under the circumstances, was negligence.

We are aware that this meaning is not attributed to the words of the second count by the plaintiff in error, whose counsel say in their reply brief that the words “changed the movement of said machinery, boom and appliances ” so as to cause the same to strike the plaintiff, can only mean that the defendant “caused the ordinary movement of said machinery, with which plaintiff was well acquainted, to be modified or changed in some unexpected or unusual way, and operated the machine in a different way without notification to plaintiff of such change.”

Of course the language of the count might bear this restricted meaning, but we think that considered with reference to the character of the machinery and appliances involved and the facts of the accident as they appear from the evidence submitted to the jury, or rather from that part of it which has been put before us (for we shall point out that a part of it is wanting in this record), the broader and more extended construction which we have indicated of the language, perhaps rather inaptly used, is a fair, legal and justifiable one for us to put on it.

" The boom which did the mischief was a part of a derrick. It was sixty feet- long or more, and it was connected with the mast of a derrick a little longer. As counsel for plaintiff in error say, the boom could be and was “raised, lowered and swung at varying heights by means of pulleys and ropes to all points of the compass.” “Its movements were governed by the engineer.”

The plaintiff, when the accident happened, was working on a platform or scaffolding at least ten and perhaps twenty feet high, about twelve feet long and eight feet wide. According to testimony which, for the purpose of reviewing this verdict and judgment we must assume the jury believed, as they certainly had the right- to do, the plaintiff was performing the work he was put on the platform to do when the boom, swinging over this platform, struck him on the shoulders. He was in a stooping position, or on one or both knees, with his back to the derrick, and untying or cutting the strings closing the mouth of bags of cement. That it was not a safe but a dangerous place to work is plainly apparent from the accident which, in this situation of things, happened to him; and this is rather emphasized than minimized by the contention of the plaintiff in error that for a number of times, estimated from a hundred at the least to perhaps two hundred during the day, that heavy boom, with its appendages, swung over this platform where this workman was not only dumping through a chute the boxes of concrete that the derrick brought, but receiving, untying and dumping through the same chute bags of cement brought by'hand to the scaffold; and that although the boom could swing at varying heights, it did swing every time only four or five feet above the platform, so that the plaintiff had to stoop or “duck” every time the boom thus came around. It may as well be noted here, however, that although this is the testimony of the foreman, it is not clear to us, in view of the testimony, of others and the photographs shown to the jury (but not to us), that this statement was received by the jury as absolutely establishing this condition of things, although it was not directly contradicted. If, as plaintiff in error contends, the derrick could and was intended to swing its boom at varying heights, it seems strange that, without apparent necessity, workmen on the platform should have been subjected to this extremely wearisome bodily-performance, to say nothing of the danger involved.

An answer, however, to the proposition that the place furnished by the defendant to the plaintiff was plainly a dangerous one, is made with great force by the defendant, that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the danger by beginning the work thereon and continuing it for five days without complaint, during all which time all the dangers must have been apparent to him, and that in this case, despite the fact that as a general rule the question of assumption of risk is one of fact for the jury, under proper instructions from the court (which in this case it is conceded were given), it became one of law for the court, because reasonable men could not have differed upon it. Therefore, it is urged, the court should have taken this count also from the jury.

As to the second count, the claim of the plaintiff in error is that in any view of its meaning, however favorable to the defendant in error, it is tantamount at most to an allegation of the negligence of a fellow servant of his, for which the common employer cannot be held liable.

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166 Ill. App. 473 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
161 Ill. App. 376, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrzejewski-v-hill-illappct-1911.