Bardon v. Excelsior Stove & Manufacturing Co.

231 Ill. App. 366, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 166
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 10, 1923
DocketGen. No. 7,578
StatusPublished

This text of 231 Ill. App. 366 (Bardon v. Excelsior Stove & Manufacturing 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
Bardon v. Excelsior Stove & Manufacturing Co., 231 Ill. App. 366, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 166 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought against appellant to recover damages sustained by the next of kin of Norma Bardon, deceased, by her death which is alleged to have occurred by reason of the negligence of appellant. The declaration consisted of four counts. As the court instructed the jury that there could be no recovery under the first, second or third counts, we are only concerned with the fourth count.

The fourth count charges that the defendant carelessly and negligently caused, suffered and permitted to be placed on the property of the defendant company in the said Mississippi river, twenty feet from the water’s edge of said river, six pilings and carelessly and negligently caused, suffered and permitted the two pilings to the south to remain so much shorter than the other piling that in an ordinary stage of the river such short piling would be submerged below the surface of the water to the depth of eighteen inches and when submerged they would become a dangerous obstruction to navigation and dangerous to persons plying light watercrafts on said river, and that by reason thereof the boat in which plaintiff’s intestate was riding unavoidably struck one of said pilings and capsized- and the plaintiff’s intestate was thrown into the water and drowned.

To these counts a plea of the general issue and a special plea were filed by the defendant. The special plea set up that said piling in the declaration mentioned were lawfully placed in the river by the Keokuk Sand Company, an independent contractor, and that said Keokuk Sand Company was employed for the purpose of ascertaining the depth of the soil on the rock in the river on the property of the defendant company in the river immediately to the west of the plant of said defendant company and that said piling were so placed by said independent contractor for the purpose of ascertaining the depth of said soil; that the said piling and the property where the same were placed were then in the exclusive control and possession of said independent contractors, and had never been accepted by the defendant or either of them. To this a replication was filed which set out that notwithstanding that the said Keokuk Sand Company drove the piling to ascertain the amount and depth of the soil on the premises, with labor furnished by them and under their exclusive control, direction and management, nevertheless the said piling were driven on the property of said defendant company and. in the manner and form set forth in the plaintiff’s declaration and were placed in the river on the property of said company and the said company accepted the same in the manner and form so driven in said river and knowingly, from thence until the time of the happening of the casualty, suffered and permitted the same to be and remain in the said river in the manner and form alleged in the declaration. Issue was joined and a trial resulted in a judgment for appellee against appellant for $5,500 damages and costs, from which judgment this appeal has been perfected.

On July 3, 1921, the appellant, Excelsior Stove & Manufacturing Company, owned property on the east bank of the Mississippi river, located in the City of Quincy, Adams County, Illinois. They there maintained and managed their plant and had done so for about twenty-four years. The bank of the river had from time to time been filled in along the property of the appellant and adjoining property so that on July 3,1921, the bank was from seventy to one-hundred feet farther west than it had been twenty-five years prior to that time. During June of 1921, Clarence Miller and Harvey Miller, partners doing business as the Keokuk Sand Company, drove said piling in said river from about five to twenty feet west of the bank and immediately to the west of the plant of the appellant. Some piling had been driven along the north property line of the defendant company in 1920. The center of the main navigable channel was about fifty feet to the west of the river bank immediately in the rear of the appellant’s plant. Between the main navigable channel and the east bank was an eddy or back current, the water striking a sand bar or levee at a place below the property of the appellant, which bar or levee was located at the outlet of a sewer in said river. This eddy extended north to the north line of the defendant’s property. The evidence showed that appellee was an experienced oarsman and had considerable experience rowing boats on the Mississippi river both for pleasure and in races; that he had rowed past the plant of the appellant on an average of two or three times per week during the summer of 1921; that he was employed by the appellant as a moulder and was on the bank of the river in the rear of the appellant’s plant about every day that he was at work during the summer prior to the date of the accident ; that he had lost no time but had been employed all the time at said plant excepting such times as the plant might not be working; that the plant was working regularly; that he saw none driven under the water; that he did not know any of the piling were submerged; that Theodore Erhart, a. director of the company, was standing on the bank of the river in the rear of said factory and saw two pilings driven by said Keokuk' Sand Company, and that neither of said piling was driven under water. That on the evening of July 3, 1921, the appellee, together with his wife, four children, the oldest one being ten years of age, the youngest about one year old, together with his nephew’s wife and her baby of less than a year old, got into a boat belonging to the appellee some distance to the south of the plant of the appellant; that the boat was about eighteen feet long, a single bow-model boat and was about forty inches in width in the middle at the top; that after getting into the boat the appellee rowed the boat up the river; that he rowed near the bank and as he came up past the appellant’s plant he saw the row of piling and turned out into the river to avoid them and, as he did so, the boat struck a submerged piling and capsized, all the occupants of the boat being thrown into the river; that certain of them were rescued; that other boats had struck against the submerged piling and that while dragging the river to find the bodies brick were placed on the top of the piling so that the place could be marked.

It is contended by appellant that there is no evidence showing that Norma Bardon is dead or that the accident was the proximate cause of her death. The evidence in the record on this point is exceedingly meager. It shows that she was eleven years of age; that she was in the boat; that when the boat struck the submerged piling, all its occupants were thrown into the river, which was fifteen to twenty feet deep at that point; that certain persons were rescued, Norma not being named as one of those rescued; that thereafter the river was dragged for the purpose of finding the bodies; there is no evidence that Norma was ever seen or heard of after the boat capsized.

The suit was brought by the administrator of Norma Bardon, deceased, and the representative character of appellee is not challenged in the pleading. Bach count of the declaration set up the death of Norma Bardon as the result of the capsizing of the boat and this fact is not denied but is tacitly admitted by the special plea.

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Bluebook (online)
231 Ill. App. 366, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bardon-v-excelsior-stove-manufacturing-co-illappct-1923.