Baier v. Selke

71 N.E. 1074, 211 Ill. 512
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 71 N.E. 1074 (Baier v. Selke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baier v. Selke, 71 N.E. 1074, 211 Ill. 512 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, Henry Baier and William Ohlendorf, owned and operated a brewery at Breeport, and the appellee, Bred Selke, was employed by them as a brewer. On the fourth floor of the brew house there was a round iron tub six feet in diameter and about seven feet high, used for boiling rice. The tub was covered and there was access by a door in the cover. In the center of the tub there was a .vertical steel shaft running down through two floors to the main shaft, to which it was connected under the ceiling of the second floor by a clutch. Attached to the shaft in the tub there were iron arms, which revolved with the shaft to stir the rice while cooking. There were also two fixed cross-bars and a steam pipe in the tub. It was the custom to clean the tub after it was used and just before using it again, and in order to make it safe to go into the tub for that purpose it was necessary to throw out the clutch at the bottom of the shaft, so that the shaft and arms would not revolve if the machinery should be started. Jacob Weber was the brew-master, who made and tested the beer and worked with the other men, .and was also the foreman, with power to hire and discharge help. On the morning of June 18, 1902, the brewery was short .of help, and the only men present wére Weber and Selke and the engineer. Selke, who was working in the cellar, was directed by Weber to go up and clean out the rice-tub. The clutch connecting the rice-tub shaft with the main shaft was not disconnected, as it ought to have been to have made the work safe. There were eight clutches in .the brewery throwing into connection different parts of the machinery, and they were operated by any of the men employed. If any one found it necessary to use a part of the machinery he would connect it by the clutch, and the man who cleaned the tub usually attended to the clutch connecting that shaft with the main shaft. The machinery could not be stopped inside of the tub, the lever for throwing the clutch being down-stairs. While Selke was working in the rice-tub, Weber, in doing his work, threw in a clutch which connected the main shaft with the engine, and the shaft in the rice-tub not being disconnected from the main shaft, it began to revolve. Selke made an outcry and Weber immediately threw out the clutch, stopping the machinery, but Selke was severely injured. He brought this suit to recover damages for his injuries, and from a judgment in his favor for $1000 an appeal was prosecuted to the Appellate Court for the Second District, where the judgment was affirmed.

The immediate cause of plaintiff’s injuries was the act of Weber in throwing in the clutch connecting the main shaft with the engine while the rice-tub shaft was connected with the main shaft. Weber testified that he threw in that clutch and threw it out as soon as he heard plaintiff’s outcry, an'd there was no dispute about that. There was no evidence, however, that the act of connecting the machinery was within the duties of the foreman or the authority conferred upon him by the defendants. On the contrary, the evidence was undisputed that whenever any of the men wanted to use a part of the machinery he threw in the clutch that would set it in motion and disconnected it when he got through. So far as appears, that act was the act of a fellow-servant of the plaintiff, for which the defendants would not be liable, and there was no evidence tending to prove the contrary. It did not pertain in any way to the duties of the foreman or to the exercise of authority by him, and the defendants were not in any manner at fault in respect to it.

There was evidence, however, tending to show negligence on the part of Weber for which the defendants would be held responsible. Plaintiff was an experienced brewer, who had been engaged in that business for eight or nine years, but he testified that although he had cleaned the mash-tub and kettles and other things about the brewery, he did not know anything about the rice-tub; that he had never been in it and that he did not know about the connection of the machinery to the rice-tub shaft. His testimony was, that he had worked the lever controlling the power for the malt house but had never worked the clutch in question; that Weber directed him to clean out the rice-tub; that he went to the tub and commenced to clean outside the door, when Weber said: “Don’t make hocus pocus outside; go right in; everything is ready;” that plaintiff looked in,.and Weber said: “Just go in; that don’t bite you; the machinery don’t start up there;” that Weber said everything was all right in the rice-tub, and that plaintiff went in and commenced to clean the inside of the tub, when the machinery started. This evidence tended to show a negligent and improper exercise of authority over the plaintiff by Weber, conferred upon him as foreman by the defendants. If Weber ordered the plaintiff into the rice-tub with assurances of safety when the shaft was not disconnected and the machinery was liable to be started with a certainty of injuring the plaintiff, the defendants would be responsible for the consequences, provided the plaintiff was ignorant of the danger and was himself in the exercise of ordinary care. There was a sharp and irreconcilable conflict in the evidence as to whether such an order was given and whether Weber was guilty of any negligence in directing the plaintiff to clean out the tub. There was testimony that plaintiff said he forgot to throw out the clutch before going into the tub, and Weber contradicted him in respect to the alleged order. Weber’s testimony was, that he did not say any of the things which were attributed to him by the plaintiff, and he testified that he said nothing except to go up and clean the rice-tub; that it was plaintiff’s duty to throw out the clutch, and that the accident resulted from his neglect. There was some competent evidence offered in rebuttal affecting the credibility of Weber, and upon the face of the record the jury might have found either way on the question of the negligence of the foreman.

In view of the testimony and the admitted act of Weber in throwing in the clutch and setting the machinery in motion, it was important that the jury should be correctly instructed as to the liability of defendants for his acts. The fifth instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff directed the jury to find the defendants guilty if they believed, from the evidence, that the plaintiff was injured, as charged in his declaration, through the negligence of the foreman while he was acting as such foreman and while plaintiff was exercising reasonable and ordinary care for his own safety, and advised the jury that in such case the negligence of the foreman was the negligence of the defendants. This instruction might not be objectionable where it could not be applied to some act for which the defendants would not be responsible, but in this case there was evidence of the act of Weber in connecting the machinery while he was foreman of the brewery, which was the direct cause of the injury but for which the defendants were not responsible. The instruction referred the jury to the declaration, and the only negligence charged in the first and third counts of the declaration was that the defendants negligently permitted the machinery in the tub to be connected with the main machinery while the plaintiff was in the tub, thereby injuring him. The only thing which the evidence tended to prove for. which the defendants would be responsible was the alleged improvident and improper order to the plaintiff by Weber.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.E. 1074, 211 Ill. 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baier-v-selke-ill-1904.