Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak

34 Ill. App. 312, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 245
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 312 (Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak) 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
Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak, 34 Ill. App. 312, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 245 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, J.

This was an action in ease brought by appellee against appellant to recover for personal injuries received by falling dirt and clay while at work in appellant’s clay pit.

The declaration was in case, charging negligence on appellant, and the plea was not guilty.

A trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $6,000. The court overruled a motion for a new trial and gave judgment on the verdict, to which appellant excepted and brings the record here on appeal, and asks for a reversal, assigning for errors that the verdict is against the law and the evidence; that the court erred in giving and refusing instructions, and that the damages awarded are excessive. The material facts involved in this suit are substantially these:

Appellant makes pressed brick, in the city of Chicago; it procures its clay at a bank owned and operated by it near the city of LaSalle, in LaSalle county, Illinois, and transports it thence to Chicago. It had been operating this pit for a number of years; this clay bank lay near the canal, and was operated by digging from the level ground back against the face of the hill or bluff and into it, but keeping all the dirt removed from the top of the ground to the level or bottom of the bank, as the work progressed forward into the body of the hill under which the clay was found.

It appears that the vein of clay being mined was about ten feet in thickness, and this clay was reached and kept uncovered, by allowing the overlying dirt and rubbish to fall or slide down, as the work progressed, forward into the hill. Sometimes this overlying dirt had to be pried, dug or blasted loose before it would fall or slide down to the bottom or floor of the pit, so it could .be hauled off out of the way of the workmen and out of the way of the clay. This work had progressed in that way from time to time, in such manner that it seems not to have been regarded as very dangerous by the workmen previous to the time in question. When the clay was uncovered or in reach of the men it was shoveled into carts, which were driven into the mine and thence dumped into canal boats. John Keily was the foreman of this mine, and seems to have had entire charge of it and the men and the work. He employed and discharged the men and paid them. The other officers of the company resided in Chicago, and paid little or no attention to the management or care of this clay bank.

Appellee was employed in February, 1887, by John Keily, as a common laborer to work with others in getting clay out of this bank, and he continued to work there in that capacity until the 2d day of June following, when he was injured; he was perfectly familiar with the work, its method and its hazard. On the day of the accident several carts were hauling clay, among others, one driven by John Keily’s son. On the day of the accident it appears that there was quite a large bank of dirt overhanging the pit where the men were at work, and it appeared to be, as it in fact was, a dangerous place for the men to go under to work. At the noon hour the men all left the pit to eat their dinner; at one o’clock they were called to their work by the foreman, John Keily. While the men were at dinner Michael Boyle had exploded a blasting dynamite cartridge in the clay under the overlying dirt, and had loosened and blown out a large amount of clay. After this occurred, at one o’clock Keily called the men to their work, and ordered them to go into the pit and remove the dirt as quick as they could. Boyle, who had just exploded the blast, told Keily that the place was dangerous for the men to work, and that he ought not send them in, but Keily replied to this, that he could get men who would remove the dirt, and that the clay could be removed before the overhanging bank would fall.

The men themselves were also protesting against going in on account of the danger, and quarreling about it, and each seeking a place as far removed from the overhanging bank as he could. But Keily paid no attention to these remonstrances, and ordered the men to go in and get to work and load the carts. Appellee himself swears that he was looking at the overhanging bank, and that he told Mr. Keily that he was afraid to go into the bank for fear it would fall on him, but that Keily paid no attention to his fears, and again ordered him to hurry up and get behind the cart and load the dirt, and told him the bank was not dangerous.

Whalen testified: “The foreman, Keily, told ns to go in there; we refused, you know, to go in there, and he told us to go in there; he said there were no pensions here; we told him the place was bad. Some men said the place was dangerous ; he said it was all right, to go in there, and he said there were no pensions here, to go in there. That was after dinner; at the time Keily said this the men were three or four feet away; after Keily said that we all went in there and began to load the cart with clay—-Frank (appellee) among them.”

Witness Early swears that when he went up on the bank to try to pry the dirt loose before the accident happened, and did not succeed in getting if off, Keily told him to come down and let it alone, that it was safe enough.

Mr. Keily in his own testimony does not deny that he said to appellee there was no danger; nor does he deny that he ordered him into the pit behind the cart to load the clay against his (appellee) protestations.

We think the evidence shows that Keily expressed the opinion that the place was not dangerous.

After appellee had been thus assured by his foreman that there was no danger, and had been two or three times ordered to go into the pit, he obeyed the order and went behind the car and began his work ; but before he had put in his third shovel of clay the bank above gave way, and the dirt came down and caught him, covering him almost entirely up. He was dug out by his fellow-workmen who had not been caught. When taken out he was insensible. He suffered a very severe and probably permanent injury. The bridge of his nose and his cheek bone were broken down. One of his eyes was seriously injured, and he claims to have also suffered a rupture in consequence of the accident. His counsel also claims that there is a curvature of the spine as a- result pf the accident, but we find no proof of that claim in the record.

It is in proof also, that John Keily, the foreman’s son, was driving the cart into which the men were loading the dirt when and where appellee was hurt and that his father said to him just before backing his car.t into position for the men to load dirt, to look out for danger, and if he, Keily, should call to him to move, to go quickly and get out of the way, and that when the dirt began to fall the boy heard the call of his father and moved his cart out. It does not appear in proof that this notice was given to any of the other workmen, though most, if not all of them, except appellee, heard it and did get out of the way and escaped injury.

It is first contended by appellant that there can be no recovery in this case, because appellee was fully acquainted with the danger he was in when he entered the bank and that, knowing the danger and hazard of the employment and having voluntarily assumed it, he can not now recover.

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Related

Chicago City Railway Co. v. Rohe
118 Ill. App. 322 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)
City of Chicago v. Merwin
105 Ill. App. 168 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)
Chicago Anderson Pressed Brick Co. v. Sobkowiak
38 Ill. App. 531 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 312, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-anderson-pressed-brick-co-v-sobkowiak-illappct-1889.