Bakovich v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.

195 N.E.2d 260, 45 Ill. App. 2d 182, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 547
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 22, 1963
DocketGen. 49,000
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 195 N.E.2d 260 (Bakovich v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.) 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
Bakovich v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co., 195 N.E.2d 260, 45 Ill. App. 2d 182, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 547 (Ill. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

MR. PRESIDING JUSTICE BURKE

delivered the opinion of the court:

John Bakovich brought an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained on June 1, 1955. He was injured in the employ of the J. M. Corbett Company, a contractor engaged in the excavating of the right of way for the Congress Street Expressway in Chicago. Plaintiff’s injuries were sustained when another employee of the Corbett Company, while operating a power shovel, broke into a gas main of The Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company, causing a fire in which plaintiff was burned. Corbett Company, for use of an insurance company, was granted leave to intervene for the purpose of asserting its Workmen’s Compensation lien in the amount of $4,130.82, covering compensation and medical expenses incurred on account of plaintiff’s injury. The court required a remittitur of $7,500 to the verdipt of $25,000 and entered a judgment against defendant for $17,500. Plaintiff reserved the right to claim that the verdict was proper. Defendant appeals. Plaintiff asks that judgment be entered for the $25,000 awarded by the jury.

Plaintiff’s employer, the J. M. Corbett Company was making excavations in the construction of the Congress Street Expressway which extends in an easterly and westerly direction across and beyond the City of Chicago. The excavation work progressed from east to west. On June 1, 1955, Corbett reached the east curb of Green Street which extends in a northerly an,d southerly direction across Congress Street Parkway, the name at that point of the narrower street in the path of the expressway. The Expressway as it extends westward, passes beneath all streets it transverses from a northerly and southerly direction. The project required the removal and relocation, particularly at intersections, of the city’s electrical conduits for street lighting, for police, fire department and traffic communications and signals, sewers, water mains, electrical telephone and telegraph cables, as well as the gas mains of the defendant.

The State of Illinois provided Corbett, as part of its contract with it, a composite blueprint of all existing utilities. This blueprint bears the legend “Plan of Existing Conditions.” Corbett was working off of this Plan of Existing Conditions on June 1, 1955. The plan shows a gas main twenty inches in diameter running in a northerly and southerly direction in and parallel with Green Street and its connection with a portion of another main six-inches in diameter and extending in an easterly and westerly direction. The six-inch main extended about thirteen feet east of the twenty-inch main. In 1955 the east and west main in Congress Street had been abandoned, except the thirteen foot section. There was gas in the thirteen foot section because it was connected to the twenty-inch main. Some of the witnesses speak of the thirteen foot section as the stub. Plaintiff says that the stub was sixteen feet in length. The evidence shows that it was about thirteen feet in length. In the amended complaint upon which plaintiff relies he speaks of the east-west six-inch main as thirteen feet of gas main. An instruction given at the request of the plaintiff also speaks of the thirteen foot section of the east-west Congress Street main.

The plan shows a vault of the Commonwealth Edison Company bearing the initials “C.E.C.V.V.” The west end of the vault of the Edison Company was approximately a foot to eighteen inches from the twenty-inch main. The six-inch main ran practically tight or adjacent to the north wall of the Edison vault. The six-inch gas main was north of this wall. On June 1, 1955, the defendant started to cut off or abandon both of its mains. The retirement of these facilities was to be accomplished by cutting off the twenty-inch main in Green Street at Yan Burén Street on the north and at Harrison Street on the south. The abandonment of the twenty-inch main in Green Street would, of necessity, cut off the supply of gas to the remaining portion of the six-inch east and west main in Congress Street. In its prior excavations Corbett had left the vault of the Edison Company intact. The Edison Company had removed its cables from this vault. The Edison Company vault extended about two feet east of the curb line of Green Street and at about the center of its intersection with Congress Parkway. The curb line is the line extending from the curb on one side of the street to the curb on the other side.

At about 10:30 a. m. on the day of the occurrence, Joseph Mason, a superintendent of Corbett and Gene Curry, a foreman for Corbett, had a conversation with defendant’s foreman. Corbett did not intend to use any power shovels at the site on this day. The shovel work was advanced by Corbett because one of its drag lines was not working. For this reason Corbett decided to use a power shovel. There was considerable rubble on the east side of Green Street and Mason, the superintendent of Corbett, wanted to have the rubble picked up. Defendant’s foreman gave permission to Corbett to put its power shovel to work in the rubble area at the east side of Green Street. It was understood that the shovel would be kept approximately six feet away from the curb line. Both Mason and Curry testified that defendant’s foreman assigned a man to follow the operation in case the shovel came into contact with house outlets, leaders or service pipes running from the main to a house or building. These service pipes are not shown on the plan. Mason, the superintendent for Corbett, was familiar with the underground system of the defendant. He knew that the mains of the defendant intersected at street intersections and he was aware that there remained a portion of a six-inch gas main in Congress Parkway and that this main carried gas. In answer to an interrogatory the defendant said that the purpose of having its employee at the intersection of Green and Congress was “precautionary.” An employee of defendant was in fact sent and remained in the vicinity of the Corbett rig as it worked along the east edge of Green Street. Defendant’s employee was observed by the employees of Corbett. He stood along Green Street observing the operation of Corbett’s shovel. Defendant’s foreman stated “that there was absolutely no danger.”

No question regarding the interpretation of the Plan of Existing Conditions as given by the State to Corbett is involved. Mason admitted that the plan showed the existence of both mains and that they were interconnected. There was no mention made of either the twenty-inch main or the six-inch main in the discussion between Mason, Curry and defendant’s foreman. Mason left the site of this work to go to another job shortly after his conference with defendant’s foreman. He left Curry in charge of the work. Curry decided to take the Edison vault out. Defendant was not informed of Curry’s intention to dismantle the Edison vault. The Edison vault was not discussed in the conference Mason and Curry had with defendant’s foreman. The shovel was then put to work along the east side of Green Street. Jack Hallberg was the operator. He did not have a map or plan showing the existence of defendant’s mains. The shovel was operated in a northerly or north-westerly direction.

Plaintiff was employed by Corbett as a truck driver. He was taking loads of debris from the excavation and dumping them at 35th and Kedzie, Chicago. At about 2:30 p. m. plaintiff returned with his truck to Congress and Green. The pavement on Green Street was intact. Normal vehicle traffic was shut off.

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Bluebook (online)
195 N.E.2d 260, 45 Ill. App. 2d 182, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakovich-v-peoples-gas-light-coke-co-illappct-1963.