Byrne v. Marshall Field & Co.

142 Ill. App. 72, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 146
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 6, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,944
StatusPublished

This text of 142 Ill. App. 72 (Byrne v. Marshall Field & 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
Byrne v. Marshall Field & Co., 142 Ill. App. 72, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 146 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $5,000, rendered in an action in case by appellee, as the administrator of Thomas P. Byrne, deceased, against Marshall Field & Co., a corporation, for, as is averred, negligently causing the death of his intestate. Thomas P. Byrne entered the employ of the defendant, Marshall Field & Co., about the 9th or 13th of September, 1905. TTis employment was to operate a passenger elevator in defendant’s building, in which goods were sold at retail. He continued to operate the elevator from the time he entered defendant’s' employ until between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon of November 5, 1905, when the elevator which he was operating fell from about the ninth floor of the building to the basement, causing his death. He was dead when taken from the elevator. The deceased was between- 26 and 27 years of age at the time of his death. Prior to the deceased becoming an employe of defendant, he worked in a grocery store and market belonging to his father, under an agreement between his father and him that they were to run the store to ascertain if it would pay, and in case, on continuing to run it, the business should arrive at a paying basis, deceased was to have a share in it.

We will refer to the pleadings only so far as is rendered necessary by the contentions of defendant’s counsel. The original declaration was filed April 16, 1903, and contains three counts, and defendant pleaded to it the general issue.

February 23, 1905, the plaintiff, by leave of court, filed two additional counts to the declaration, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue and the Statute of Limitations. The plaintiff demurred to defendant’s plea of the Statute of Limitations, which demurrer the court sustained. May 1, 1907, plaintiff, by leave of court, amended the original declaration, and the defendant pleaded the general issue and the Statute of Limitations to the amended declaration, and plaintiff demurred to the plea of the statute. The court sustained the demurrer, and the defendant elected to stand by its pleas of the Statute of Limitations to the original declaration, as amended, and to the additional counts.

Counsel for defendants contend that the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s plea of the Statute of Limitations to the original declaration, as amended, and also in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s plea of the statute to the two additional counts.

The suit was commenced March 19, 1903. Survivor-ship is averred in the original declaration, as follows: “And the plaintiff further alleges that, by reason and in consequence of the death of the said Thomas P. Byrne, his mother, Mary Byrne, his father, John Byrne, and his sisters, Katherine Byrne, Irene Byrne, Margaret Byrne and Bernice Byrne, whom he, the said Thomas P. Byrne, left him surviving, have been deprived of support,” etc. The amendment of the declaration consists in the insertion, next after the words “left him surviving” in each of the three counts of the original declaration, of these words—“as his sole heirs and next of kin.” The defendant’s counsel argue quite elaborately that the original declaration stated no cause of action, in not averring that the persons mentioned as surviving the deceased were his next of kin. The father, mother and sisters of the deceased were his nearest blood relations, and his next of kin, of which the court will take notice. Who the next of kin of the deceased are is a question of law, and the law is that the father, mother and sisters of the deceased are his next of kin. Even though it should have been averred that they were his next of kin, the omission to so aver is merely a defective statement of a cause of action. The original declaration states a cause of action, and the declaration, as amended, does not state a new cause of action. What is not necessary to be proved is not necessary to be averred, and it. is too plain for argument that the plaintiff, after proving that the survivors were the father, mother and sisters of the deceased, was not obliged to introduce proof that they were his next of kin.

Counsel for defendant say: “The second of the additional counts alleges, in substance, that the defendant failed to furnish and provide an inspector, for the purpose of inspecting the elevator in question, which we respectfully submit is not a cause of action set up in any of the counts of the original declaration; but is a cause of action entirely different from and in addition to any cause of action alleged in the original declaration A On this statement as a premise counsel proceed to argue that their plea of the Statute of Limitations to the two additional counts should have been sustained, and the demurrer thereto overruled. The language of the second additional count is: “And that it became and was the duty of the said defendant to furnish and provide an inspector, for the purpose of inspecting the condition of said elevator shaft and machinery; that it became and was the duty of said defendant to properly inspect said elevator and machinery ; but that the defendant, not regarding its duty in that behalf, carelessly, negligently and improperly failed to properly and sufficiently inspect the same. That by means thereof the said elevator or car operated by the said Thomas P. Byrne was permitted to be and remain unsafe and insecure, and was permitted to be operated by the defendant while in such unsafe and insecure condition. That by means thereof, whilst the said Thomas P. Byrne was aboard said car, in the performance of his duties of said elevator operator or conductor, aforesaid, and in the exercise of due care and caution for his own safety, the said car or cage, whilst descending from, to-wit, the ninth floor of said building, fell,” etc.

The negligence averred in the count is, clearly, that the defendant carelessly, negligently and improperly failed to properly and sufficiently inspect the elevator and its machinery. This is the cause of action and the only cause of action stated in the count. It is not alleged, in substance, as defendant’s counsel say, “that the defendant failed to furnish and provide an inspector,” or at all in any way. In the third count of the original declaration it is averred, in substance, that the defendant had in its employ an incompetent inspector, and that by reason of defective inspection by said incompetent inspector, the attachments and appliances of the elevator were allowed to be and remain in a weak, defective and unsafe condition, by reason of which the accident occurred. The second additional count does not state a new cause of action, and the demurrer to defendant’s plea of the Statute of Limitations to that count was properly sustained. Counsel do not, in their argument, contend that the first additional count states a new cause of action.

Counsel for defendant contend that, the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction requested by defendant:

“The jury are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s intestate, Thomas P. Byrne, knew two or three days before the accident in question that the elevator in question which he was operating was out of order, and continued to operate such elevator, then plaintiff’s intestate assumed the risk of such elevator being so out of order, and your verdict should be for the defendant.”

Counsel quote and rely on the evidence of James Gr.

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Related

Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Heerey
68 N.E. 74 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 Ill. App. 72, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrne-v-marshall-field-co-illappct-1908.