Blue v. Environmental Engineering, Inc.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 2003
Docket1-02-1647 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Blue v. Environmental Engineering, Inc. (Blue v. Environmental Engineering, Inc.) 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
Blue v. Environmental Engineering, Inc., (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION

December 31, 2003

No. 1-02-1647

GLEN BLUE, ) Appeal from the

) Circuit Court of

Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County.

)

v. )

ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING, INC., a )

wholly owned subsidiary of BROWNING-FERRIS ) No. 01 L 4314

INDUSTRIES, INC., a Delaware corporation, )

Defendant-Appellee and )

Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant (footnote: 1) )

(John M. Smyth Company, ) Honorable

) Barbara J. Disko,

Third-Party Defendant-Appellee). ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

On February 11, 2002, a jury returned a general verdict for plaintiff Glen Blue and against defendant Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc., and third-party defendant John M. Smyth Co., finding defendants guilty of negligence.  At the close of the evidence, the jury also answered a special interrogatory submitted by defendant Browning in the affirmative.  Finding that there was a fatal inconsistency between the general verdict and the response to the special interrogatory, the trial court granted Browning's motion for a judgment on the special interrogatory.  Judgment was thereafter entered for defendants.  Plaintiff now appeals the trial court's judgment on the special interrogatory and we reverse and remand for the following reasons.

BACKGROUND

The evidence presented at trial established that in 1975, defendant Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc. (Browning), sold to and installed a heavy duty trash compactor in the Downers Grove, Illinois, warehouse of third-party defendant John M. Smyth Co. (Smyth).  The compactor was generally used by Smyth employees to compact cardboard boxes, furniture and wooden skids, and was emptied by Browning upon request.  The compactor consisted of a ram which slid back and forth to compact the refuse put into the chamber.  It could be turned on and off after each compaction or could run in a continuous mode.  The control panel of the compactor contained a power switch and there was a pull cord hanging over the mouth of the compactor which would stop the machine.

In 1991, as the result of a safety audit conducted by the State of Illinois, Smyth installed a gate at the mouth of the compactor, which was designed to turn off the compactor when opened.  The bars of the gate were covered by wire mesh, which was subsequently removed by Smyth employees because it was regularly knocked off by boxes as they were pushed back by the ram.

In 1988, plaintiff began working part-time in Smyth's Northbrook, Illinois, warehouse, taking customer orders, retrieving furniture, accepting deliveries and operating the trash compactor at that facility.  In 1990, he was transferred to the Downers Grove warehouse where, he stated, his duties were similar to those he performed in Northbrook.  Plaintiff testified that he never received training on the Downers Grove trash compactor, but had operated it a number of times and watched other employees use the compactor.  Plaintiff stated at trial that the compactor often jammed and it was the usual practice of the employees, including the warehouse supervisor, Phillip Polizzi, to push refuse down into the compactor with one's foot while it was moving.  He did state, however, that he had been told not put his arms or legs into the moving compactor.  Polizzi and assistant warehouse supervisor Andrew Banda denied that they ever put their arms or legs into the moving compactor.  They stated that if they had ever observed an employee doing so, he would have received a written citation.

On November 5, 1996, plaintiff was assigned to operate the trash compactor.  He testified that he informed Banda a number of times that the compactor was full and would not operate properly.  He stated Banda told him to continue operating the compactor as the loading dock needed to be cleared of refuse.  At trial, Banda denied that plaintiff reported the compactor was full.  Plaintiff stated that after he placed a large sofa box into the compactor, the compactor stopped and would not crush the box.  While the compactor was running in a continuous mode, plaintiff placed his leg through the bars of the closed gate and pushed the box down with his foot so that it would be grabbed by the ram.  However, plaintiff's foot became caught in the box and plaintiff was pulled into the compactor as the ram took hold of the box.  Plaintiff stated he could not reach the pull cord to stop the compactor as it was several feet above his head when he was in the compactor.  He was thereafter hit by the ram approximately three times, resulting in a broken pelvis, leg and foot.

On May 5, 1994, plaintiff filed a complaint against a number of defendants including Browning.  Count I of the complaint was based in strict liability and alleged that at the time the trash compactor left Browning's control it was unreasonably dangerous for one or more of four listed reasons.  Count I was subsequently dismissed for being filed after the applicable statute of repose had expired.  Count IV of the complaint, based in negligence, alleged that it was defendant's duty to distribute a machine that was reasonably safe for its intended purpose and that one or more of the following acts or omissions by Browning proximately caused plaintiff's injuries:

"(a) Carelessly and negligently distributed a compactor machine with inadequate safety guards and devices to protect the operator.

(b)  Carelessly and negligently failed to provide a gate with a latch and safety switch; thereby creating an extra hazardous condition for operators using the same.

(c)  Carelessly and negligently failed to provide a Dead Man's switch near or at the site of the compactor's ram so that an operator could immediately stop the machine if his body was sucked into the same.

(d)  Carelessly and negligently failed to give employee adequate instruction and training in the use of an exceptionally and reasonably [ sic ] dangerous compacting device.

(e)  Carelessly and negligently failed to post adequate signs and failed to warn the operator that his body could be sucked into the machine because there were no safety devices located at or near the machine."

In response to plaintiff's complaint, defendant asserted various affirmative defenses, including that plaintiff assumed the risk of his injury by sticking his foot into the compactor, that plaintiff misused the compactor thereby proximately causing his own injury, and that plaintiff was contributorily negligent.

Following the presentation of the evidence summarized above, the jury was instructed that it could find defendant guilty of negligence if it found that plaintiff was injured and that the injury was proximately caused by the acts or omissions of defendant.  The jury was further instructed that if plaintiff's own negligence contributed to his injury, then it must find plaintiff was contributorily negligent and reduce any recovery accordingly; however, if it found plaintiff's contributory negligence to be more than 50% of the total proximate cause of his injury, plaintiff would be barred from any recovery.

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