Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak

36 N.E. 572, 148 Ill. 573, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1511
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 36 N.E. 572 (Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak, 36 N.E. 572, 148 Ill. 573, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1511 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This action was brought by appellee, against appellant, in the circuit court of LaSalle county, to recover for personal injuries sustained in consequence of the fall of a bank under which appellee was mining clay. Appellant was engaged in the manufacture of pressed brick in the city of Chicago at and for some years prior to the time the appellee was injured. Its office was in that city, as were also its officers. Appellee had been at work for appellant between four and five months prior to June 2, 1887, when he was injured while working in a pit, with a number of others, procuring clay for the use of appellant at its factory at Chicago. The clay was taken from the side of a bluff near LaSalle, Illinois. There had been opened along the bluff, from four to six hundred feet, a pit, and from the bottom of that pit to the surface at the top was about thirty feet. The clay lay in strata, and that which was mined and shipped to Chicago was called No. 1, and was about ten feet in thickness from the bottom of the pit. Above this was a stratum of clay of about the same thickness, and above that about the same depth of inorganic matter. From the surface shrubs, grass and trees grew, and near the surface were many spreading roots. Ever since appellant had been mining this clay, the custom had been to blast or otherwise loosen or dig out the No. 1 clay, and when sufficient clay had been taken out, the bank above would slide down or was pried or blasted off, throwing it down on the floor of the pit, from -whence it was removed as worthless. As the blasting out and removal of the clay from beneath progressed, the bank above would project more and more, until it would slide down or be forced off by prying or blasting. In this way the undesirable portion was disposed of from below, and was not stripped off from the surface. The clay, when mined, was loaded into dump-carts and hauled to canal-boats, by which it was taken to Chicago. John Keily was superintendent of the work, and had entire charge of it. He hired and discharged the men, kept their time, directed and controlled their work, and was the only officer or representative of appellant exercising such control or present where the work was carried on, and was in the sole and exclusive control. On June 2, 1887, the clay at the place of the accident had been taken out so that the bank above projected about ten feet. On the day previous, one of the drivers (Early) refused to drive under the overhanging bank, and Keily told* him to go up on top and put it down. Early went up on the bank where a crack had been opened about four inches wide between it and the hill, biit it was held from falling by roots connecting it with the hill. Early tried to loosen it with a crow-bar, but was ordered by Keily to. come down and attend to his cart, and did so. Early said the bank would come down, and Keily said it would not, and Early returned to his cart, but refused to drive under the bank. He was not at work at that point, but he would not drive under it when coming out. On June 2, at the noon hour, Michael Boyle, who had charge of the blasting, fired a blast in the clay beneath this overhanging bank, and immediately afterward the men went to work. Boyle called Keily’s attention to the hank, and told him that it was not safe, and that he had better take the bank down before he put any men under there to work. Keily replied that he wanted to get that clay out before the surface material should come down and dirty all the clay,—that he could get plenty of men, but he wanted to get the clay out. One cart was loaded after dinner, and Keily’s son, who was driving a cart, backed up at the spot where the accident happened. The shovelers were standing there, and appellee was among them, and there was some reluctance manifested to going under the bank. Keily told them to go in, and to hurry up and load up the cart. The custom was to have one shoveler on each side and one in the rear of the cart. Appellee commenced shoveling from one side of the cart, and there was a difficulty among the men as to who should go behind it, there being two at the side where appellee was. Keily told appellee that his place was behind the cart, and ordered him to go there. Appellee objected on account of the dangerous condition of the bank, and said that if it should come down it would kill a man. Keily assured him that the bank was all right, and appellee, still fearing danger, went behind the cart. Keily had told his son, who was .driving the cart, that if he got the word to drive out, he should drive out quickly. Appellee had put in about three shovels of clay when the bank fell. Keily gave the word and his son drove out, and the men at the side of the cart escaped, but the bank fell on appellee, who was in a more dangerous position, and he was seriously injured.

A trial resulted in a verdict for $8500, when defendant entered a motion for a new trial. A remittitur of $2500 was entered, and the motion for a new trial was overruled, and a judgment entered for appellee in the sum of $6000. That judgment was affirmed on appeal to the Appellate Court, and the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The 7th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th and 15th instructions asked by appellant were on the theory that the defendant would not be liable for any injury sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the carelessness or negligence of other employes associated with him and in the same line of employment. The refusal of the 12th, and the modification'of the 7th, 11th, 13th and 14th, are assigned as error.

Corporations must necessarily act by or through agents,. One with delegated authority to employ and discharge laborers, superintend their work', and generally direct and control, under general power and instructions from the corporation, may well be regarded as the representative of the corporation charged with the performance of its duty. The acts of one, in such case, are the acts of the corporation, and where one is exercising this control and superintendence, governing and directing the movements of those under his charge, within the scope of his authority, his act, command or negligence is the act, command or negligence of the company. To one employed by him in such capacity, and who is working under his supervision, he stands in a superior relation, and between such representative of the corporation and one employed by him to work subject to his command and supervision, the relation of fellow-servants does not exist. Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Co. v. Moranda, 93 Ill. 302; Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. May, 108 id. 288.

Under the evidence in this case, John Keily was the representative of the corporation, and as to the work and control of the men employed by him in conducting their work may be regarded as the general agent of the company, and the 12th instruction sought to instruct the jury that if Keily was acting as foreman at the time plaintiff was injured, that fact did not prevent the plaintiff and Keily from being servants in the same line of employment or render the corporation liable. As asked, this instruction sought to narrow the position and character of the duties of Keily, as shown by his evidence, and wholly disregarded his authority, except as foreman, merely. His general authority and control was the material fact involved in the relation between him and appellee, and an instruction based on a statement as to a part of his duties, authority and o control, did not correctly state a rule of law applicable to the case.

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36 N.E. 572, 148 Ill. 573, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-anderson-pressed-brick-co-v-sobkowiak-ill-1894.