Barnett Record Co. v. Schlapka

110 Ill. App. 672, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 675
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 Ill. App. 672 (Barnett Record Co. v. Schlapka) 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
Barnett Record Co. v. Schlapka, 110 Ill. App. 672, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 675 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

In July and August, 1901, the Barnett & Record Company, a corporation, was erecting an annex to the Iowa elevator at Peoria. As a part of that work an excavation was dug in the earth from the annex to the elevator to form a tunnel through which grain was to be conveyed. It was about thirty-five feet long, eight feet deep and twelve feet,ivide at the bottom, with sides sloping so that it was two or three feet wider at the top. In the bottom of this ditch, or tunnel, a trench was dug on each side in which a concrete foundation was to be laid for the permanent side walls of the tunnel. When the trenches were dug temporary boxes in which to receive the concrete were formed by placing boards, or strips of boards, on each side of each trench. These trenches seem to have been three feet wide and eighteen inches deep, though the superintendent stated other dimensions. The npper part of the material through which the ditch was dug was made ground, which had been dumped there and packed, and which had become tough, so it hung together; lower down the ditch was cut through looser material, and at the bottom it was sand. Prior to August 6th the ditch had been completed, and the trenches at the sides were then being dug for the foundations of the walls. Two railroad tracks passed over this tunnel at the surface of the ground. .There was a permanent I-beam under each rail, and each I-beam was supported by two upright posts, each about six inches inside of where the tunnel wall was to be built, and each resting on a mud sill set in the bottom of the ditch. These posts were tied together in one direction and braced in the other. The temporary work had been completed by August 7th, so that for three days before that date trains of cars had been run across these tunnels in the night and in the early morning before the men went to work in the ditch. The passage of these trains tended to loosen the soil in the sides of the tunnel. In the afternoon of August 6th Casper Schlapka began work for the company as a common laborer, and dug á short time in another ditch, but worked most of that afternoon handling stone above ground. In the forenoon of the next day, by direction of his foreman, he went into the ditch above described and began shoveling dirt or sand out of the trench. In a short time thereafter he was outside of the ditch, at or near the mouth of the tunnel. Why he was there is disputed. Brown, the carpenter, who was making the concrete boxes, was going into the tunnel, carrying a plank. Brown asked or directed Schlapka to carry one end, which he did, walking in the trench. This was only ten or twenty minutes after he was first sent into the trench to work. When he was near, or under one of the railroad tracks, the side of the tunnel caved in upon him, and he was covered with the earth and thrown against an edge of a concrete box, and received a fracture of the surgical neck of the right femur. He brought this suit against his employer to recover damages for the injuries so sustained.

The declaration charged that defendant negligently shored, propped and braced the sides of the tunnel in a manner which was insecure, unsafe and dangerous, and, in another count, that defendant had partially and negligently excavated the tunnel, and that it was an unsafe place in which to work. It was averred that plaintiff became an employe of defendant; that plaintiff was unskillful and inexperienced in such work, and did not know the excavating, propping and bracing, had been performed in an insecure, unsafe, dangerous and negligent manner; that he was assured by defendant’s foreman that said ditch was a safe place in which to work without danger; that plaintiff relied upon such assurance, and by order of the foreman went to work in said ditch or tunnel, and while so at work, and using due care for his personal safety, and without knowledge, or reasonable means of knowledge, that said tunnel was an unsafe place in which to work, the sides and banks, by reason of their insufficient propping, shoring and bracing, and by reason of their careless and negligent construction, gave way, caved in and fell on plaintiff, and he was thereby greatly hurt and wounded, and became sick, lame and disordered, and so remained from thence hitherto, and suffered great pain, and was prevented from transacting his affairs and business, and was forced to lay out divers sums in endeavoring to be cured. Defendant pleaded the general issue. There was a jury trial, and a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $3,760, from which defendant appeals. Defendant urges that the caving in was an accident; that plaintiff assumed the risk thereof; that he was injured after warning, and while disobeying an order to keep out of the trench, and while obeying an order, or request of a fellow-servant, not binding on defendant; that the damages are excessive; and that the court erred in rulings upon instructions. i

Tamm wais defendant’s superintendent, and Eckley was foreman of this work. Plaintiff and two other witnesses testified that when plaintiff was ordered to go to work in the ditch he questioned the foreman as to the safetjr of the place, and whether it was solid, meaning, obviously, whether the bank was solid, and that the foreman assured him it was safe and solid. Plaintiff had another witness who testitled to a similar statement b^ the foreman to plaintiff shortly before the bank caved in. Eckley denied that he made such a statement. We are asked to say these three witnesses were unworthy of belief because they testified either that there were no supports in the ditch for the railroad tracks or that they did not see any, whereas there were such supports there. The ditch seems to have been covered in part by a roof, at least it was dark in one end. Some of these witnesses had only worked there a short time. Some had evidently paid little attention to the surroundings. But they were disinterested, and the jury saw and believed them. Besides, if the testimony of those three had been rejected by the jury, they still had a right to believe plaintiff against the foreman. There was nothing unreasonable in plaintiff’s testimony. We find nothing in the condition of the proof on this subject which would warrant us in reversing this verdict on the ground the jury should have believed the foreman against three or four witnesses on the other side. On the contrary, the record requires us to assume it was proved that when plaintiff was ordered into the ditch he inquired of his superior officer as to the safety of the place, received from the foreman assurances of its safety, and went into the ditch and went to work in the trench in reliance upon these assurances. There were several circumstances in evidence tending to show it was not safe, and that defendant’s foreman and superintendent knew it. Defendant had already shored or braced one side of part of the ditch, but not where plaintiff was set at work. This indicated defendant feared it might cave in and hence took that precaution. Defendant was at the same time digging another like tunnel about twenty-five feet from this one, in the same kind of soil, under the same general conditions, running in the same direction from the annex to the elevator, and crossed by the same railroad tracks. That bank caved in three days before the injury to plaintiff. The trains crossed in the night by arrangement of defendant’s superintendent, and their motion and weight had a tendency to loosen the dirt in the upper part of the ditch, and the superintendent and foreman knew it.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Ill. App. 672, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-record-co-v-schlapka-illappct-1903.