Citizens Gas Light & Heating Co. v. O'Brien

15 Ill. App. 400, 1884 Ill. App. LEXIS 132
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Ill. App. 400 (Citizens Gas Light & Heating Co. v. O'Brien) 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
Citizens Gas Light & Heating Co. v. O'Brien, 15 Ill. App. 400, 1884 Ill. App. LEXIS 132 (Ill. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

McCulloch, J.

This was a suit by appellee against appellant to recover damages resulting to her from the death of her husband, which she alleges was caused by the negligence of appellant, under the following circumstances. Appellant is the owner of a building intended to be used for the manufacture of illuminating gas by means of a certain apparatus manufactured by A. O. Granger & Co. This firm had about completed their contract for putting in the works, and had made one test of them on the day preceding that on which the accident happened which resulted in the death of appellee’s husband, but had not yet turned the same over to appellant.

The principal parts of this apparatus consist of a generator, located beneath the main floor, and three upright cylindrical chambers of about the height of eighteen feet above the floor upon which they stand. The first of these is called the super-heater, the second the condenser, and the third the scrubber. Coal is put into the generator and ignited, the combustion being greatly accelerated by a strong blast of air from a revolving fan. From the generator the smoke and gases, resulting from the combustion of the coal, pass into the superheater, where they are met by another blast of air from the fan, whereby the combustion is completed. The interior of the superheater is lined with fire bricks, and this process of burning coal is continued until these fire bricks are heated to a white heat, when the chamber is closed against the external air and the process of generating the illuminating gas is commenced. At the top of the superheater is a valve for the escape of the products of combustion during the heating process, but when the process of generating the illuminating gas is about to commence this valve is closed. The gases produced by the consumption of the coal daring the heating process, and which escape through the valve at the top of the superheater, are carbonic acid gas and carbonic oxide, both of which are said to be highly deleterious to human life when inhaled into the lungs.

Tor several days prior to the day in question a slow fire had been kept burning in the generator for the purpose of drying out the lining of fire bricks in the superheater. On the day next preceding that of the accident, the works had been started and a small quantity of illuminating gas manufactured. The draft had been shut ofif from the generator about five o’clock in the afternoon, leaving in-it a bed of partially consumed coal in an ignited condition, and the valve at the top of the superheater open. It remained in that condition over night, so that if any noxious gases were generated during that time they had free access to the upper part of the building. The fact that there was no draft of air through the generator would render combustion very slow and the escape of gases through the valve correspondingly diminished.

The building consisted of a brick wall with numerous windows and doors, and a slate roof supported by an iron frame. The roof was pierced with three openings, of the diameter of twenty and twenty-four inches respectively, for ventilating purposes. The intention was to place a pipe with a funnel-shaped mouth, opening downward, and projecting through the roof, directly over the valve at the top of the superheater to carry oft" what was emitted therefrom, but it had not yet been placed in position.

On the day in question, Mr. Odell, the agent of Granger & Go., was yet in charge of the apparatus for manufacturing gas, while one Burns, the superintendent employed by the appellant, had charge of the building and the works generally, and had the control of nearly if not all the men employed about the same. A few minutes before noon on that day Odell had the engine started with the intention of making another trial of the apparatus, but the blast had not yet been started through the generator. Some fresh coal had been put in during the forenoon, but the fire had not been started up, so that it appears the works were nearly in the same condition they had been during the night.

Some planks were lying upon the iron girders nearly over tlie superheater. Fearing these might take fire Burns sent the deceased, who was in appellant’s employment as a laborer, and one Clark to remove them. Deceased ascended by a ladder to the top of the condenser, and then taking hold of the iron girder, which was higher than his head, swung himself up to where the planks were. In the meantime Clark had taken off his coat and had gotten part way up the same ladder. Looking up he saw the deceased swing himself down to the top of the condenser. After standing there for a few moments he tottered and fell to the brick floor and received the injuries from which he died.

The gravamen of the charge is that by reason of the defective condition and operation of such apparatus poisonous gases escaped into that portion of the room where the deceased was directed to go; that Burns negligently directed the deceased to go there; that he was overcome by inhaling the said gases and fell to the floor, receiving the injuries from which he died; that appellant knew, or might by the exercise of reasonable care have known of the presence of such gases, but that the deceased did not know of the'same although he was in the exercise of reasonable care.

, There was no attempt to prove the presence of any of the illuminating gas in the building, but the proof was confined wholly to that which escaped through the superheater valve as the product of the combustion of the coal.

The presence of gas is attempted to be proved by the action of the deceased. Immediately after reaching the place where his work was to be done he left without accomplishing the object of his mission. Clark says he spoke to him but received no answer; that deceased looked overcome and “sorter” dizzy; that he went to sit*down, his knees began to quiver and he went over backward. Joe Kirby, a boy eleven years old, the only other witness who saw him fall, says he had his hands clasped around the boards; that he swung and let go when in the center of the condenser; tried to bend his knees a little; tried to get hold of the ladder, and fell; that Clark did not say anything, but hallooed when O’Brien fell; that deceased did not speak but made a little groan just before he fell, and that he fell forward.

Clark -also testified that when on the ladder he smelled some gas; that the superheater valve was open; the wind was on the blower, and that flame and sparks were issuing from the valve. His testimony is somewhat invalidated by the testimony of other witnesses, who ascended the ladder very shortly afterward and smelled no gas, and of others who overwhelm him upon the subject of the blast having been turned on the fire.

It is not contended that these noxious gases were afloat in sufficient quantities in the lower portion of the building to endanger life. Hor is there any evidence that Burns or any other agent of appellant had actual notice of their presence above. Burns, on the contrary, testifies he had no knowledge whatever they were there.

It is contended, however, that Burns, being a man of experience in the manufacture of gas and in the use of apparatus similar to this, if in the exercise of reasonable care would have known of the presence of these gases at the place to which he sent the deceased to work, and that his failure to inform himself thereof was culpable negligence, for which appellant is liable.

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Related

National Gas Light & Fuel Co. v. Miethke
35 Ill. App. 629 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ill. App. 400, 1884 Ill. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-gas-light-heating-co-v-obrien-illappct-1884.