Balkwill v. Becker

131 Ill. App. 221, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 29
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 21, 1907
DocketGen. No.12,974
StatusPublished

This text of 131 Ill. App. 221 (Balkwill v. Becker) 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
Balkwill v. Becker, 131 Ill. App. 221, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 29 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee was plaintiff and the appellants were defendants in the trial court, and will be so referred to here. The case was submitted to the jury on the first and second counts of the declaration, which are, in substance, as follows:

First count: February 2, 1903, defendants were operating a factory in the city of Chicago, for the manufacture of furniture, in which factory they operated certain machinery, and plaintiff was in their employ, his duty being to operate a shaping machine which was used in cutting, trimming and shaping certain wooden articles. Said machine was fitted with a metal platform and certain knives revolved in it on the platform, at a high rate of speed, by means of vertical shafts which extended through the platform; and it was plaintiff’s duty, in operating said machine, to place wooden articles on the platform, and with his hand bring and hold them in contact with the knives, in such manner that said articles would be properly shaped. It was the duty of defendants to keep said shaping machine in good and safe condition and repair, and the platform thereof level, even and smooth, so that plaintiff might safely use the same; but defendants negligently allowed said machine to be and remain in a bad and unsafe condition, and particularly said platform, at and about the places where said knives revolved, tó be and remain rough, uneven and otherwise unsafe; and, by reason of the negligence of the defendants while plaintiff was operating said machine, a certain wooden article, held by plaintiff, slipped and moved on said rough and uneven platform, and plaintiff’s right hand was thereby thrown against said revolving knives and three fingers were severed from his said hand, etc.

In the second count it is averred that said machine was fitted with a spring or clutch, for holding and securing in place articles placed on the platform of the machine to be shaped. It was plaintiff’s duty to place certain wooden articles on said platform and, by the use of his hands, in connection with said spring or clutch, to bring and hold such articles in contact with the said knives in such manner that said articles would be properly shaped. And plaintiff “avers that the operation of said shaping machine, in the manner aforesaid, in shaping and trimming articles that could be secured and held by said spring or clutch, was the regular and ordinary duty of the plaintiff, and that the use and operation of said machine, without the use of said spring or clutch to hold and secure said articles, was attended with danger, by reason of the difficulty in properly securing and holding said articles upon said platform and in contact with said knives. And the plaintiff avers that the defendants then and there had also an employe, one Fred Fisher, who was the foreman and master and director of said plaintiff, and had authority to command and order said plaintiff about the doing of his work for said defendants, and said foreman thereupon ordered said plaintiff to 'Shape and trim upon said machine certain articles of wood, which, by reason of their size and form, could not be handled or manufactured upon said machine without removing said spring or clutch; that the plaintiff, thereupon, objected to operating said machine, without said clutch or spring, and protested to said foreman against being required to handle and attend to the shaping of said articles upon said machine, because of the fact that said articles could not be handled and manufactured thereon without exposing plaintiff to the hazard of bringing his hand in contact with said revolving knives. And plaintiff avers that it then and there became and was the duty of the defendants, by and through their said foreman, not to require or direct said plaintiff to engage in said hazardous labor, and that said defendants, by and through their said foreman, had notice and knowledge of the dangers and hazards aforesaid; but said defendants, not regarding their duty in that behalf, by and through their said foreman, thereupon ordered the plaintiff to shape and trim said articles on said machine, and assured plaintiff that he would be exposed to no greater danger, in operating said machine upon said kind of articles, and without said spring or clutch, than existed when he, the plaintiff, ii sed said machine in and about his ordinary work thereon, and used said spring or clutch to secure and hold the articles he was. shaping or trimming as aforesaid. And plaintiff says he had no knowledge of any peril or hazard so imminent and apparent as to deter him, in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care, from obeying the command of said foreman, and performing said work as ordered by said foreman, so acting as aforesaid in behalf of said defendants, and as the vice-principal of said plaintiff; and the plaintiff, relying upon said assurance and promise of said defendants’ foreman, commenced trimming and shaping said articles upon said machine, from which said spring or clutch had necessarily been removed, in order that articles of said size and form might be handled on said platform; and, by reason of the aforesaid negligence, carelessness and improper conduct of the said defendants, by and through their said foreman, and while the plaintiff was then and there in the exercise of.all due care and caution for his own safety, at all the times herein stated, and was so operating said machine, a certain article of wood held by plaintiff, and upon which he was then working at said machine, slipped suddenly upon said platform, and the right hand of the plaintiff was thereby thrown against the said revolving knives, and three fingers of said hand were severed,” etc.

The defendants pleaded the general issue, the jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at the sum of $1,500, and the court, after overruling defendants’ motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, rendered judgment on the verdict.

The plaintiff, who was the principal witness for himself, testified that he did not take the spring off, and that it was on at the time of the accident.

Q. “Mr. Becker, I believe you said that the power was on—I mean that the clutch—the spring and clutch is the same thing, isn’t it?” A. “Yes.”

Q. “-They are sometimes called spring and sometimes called clutch?” A. “Well, I never heard it called clutch—only spring.”

Q. “We will call it spring then; that was on the machine at the time of the accident, was it?” A. “Yes.”

Q. “Why didn’t you .take the spring off?”

A. “I thought in case she should go to work and get away from me, on account I got that warped top,perhaps she would protect me a little. That is why I put the spring on; but she knocked the spring all to pieces and my hand along with it.”

Patch and Fisher, two of defendants’ witnesses, also testified that the spring was on. Fisher testified, “I saw the spring was tightened on the machine and the block in the front was broken. ’ ’ Defendants ’ counsel, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, called the attention of the court to the variance, and counsel for the plaintiff, apparently recognizing that there was a variance, asked leave of the court, while • the argument for a new trial was proceeding, to file an additional count, by way of amendment, which the court refused. The additional count, which the court refused leave to file, is in the record, and it contains no reference to the spring or clutch.

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Bluebook (online)
131 Ill. App. 221, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balkwill-v-becker-illappct-1907.