Crotty v. Horn

186 Ill. App. 74, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 810
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 23, 1914
DocketGen. No. 19,116
StatusPublished

This text of 186 Ill. App. 74 (Crotty v. Horn) 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
Crotty v. Horn, 186 Ill. App. 74, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 810 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this writ of error the defendant, William Horn, seeks to have reversed a judgment rendered against him in the Superior Court for six thousand dollars, for negligently causing the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Patrick McNamara. The accident happened between one and two o’clock in the afternoon of Sunday, August 28, 1910. McNamara, was working in the basement of a building which was being remodeled. He was in the employ of Carl Bushnell and John J. Mason, who had the contract for the work of reconstruction. The work of putting in place the structural steel used in making the alterations had been sublet to the defendant Horn, who furnished the labor, tools, ropes, etc., required for that purpose. Horn’s foreman was a man named Timmons. When his men were quitting work on the day before the accident, Timmons, acting upon a misunderstanding as to Horn’s intentions, told the men to return for work the next morning, Sunday. When Timmons reported that fact to Horn that evening, Horn told him this was a mistake and instructed him to notify the men to return on Monday instead of Sunday. Being unable to reach the men for that purpose on Saturday evening, Timmons went to the building on Sunday morning and told the men, who had reported for work as directed, of Ms mistake. Mason and several of Ms men, including McNamara, were working in the building at that time, and as Horn’s men were leaving, he called out to them “What’s the matter, aren’t you going to work?” Timmons replied, “NotMng doing this morning; Horn won’t stand for any double time.” Mason then said that he had bricklayers working, that one of Horn’s derricks was in the way, and that if Timmons and his men would go to work and move the derrick, he (Mason) would pay them, or see that they were paid, “for double time.” Timmons telephoned this request to Horn. Horn asked how long it would take to move the derrick, and Timmons replied that it would take about three or four hours. Horn then said that he didn’t like Sunday work, but if Mason would pay the double time, to go ahead; “but”, he added, “I won’t pay any double time for moving derricks.” Upon this understanding, Horn’s men went to work. They finished moving the derrick about noon and were going away, when Mason said that he “was ready for the grillage beams,” that they “might as well work on them as long as they were there, and that the pay would be all right, ’ ’ that “if Mr. Horn didn’t want to pay them, he would pay,” and that they “would be that much ahead of themselves Monday morning.” The grillage beams thus referred to were steel “I” beams, twenty-eight feet long, twenty inches in height, weighing about 1,800 pounds, and were designed to be used as a part of the new foundation. One of these beams was lying on the main floor, at the time of this conversation, about forty feet from an opening in the floor large enough to permit the beam to be lowered through it to the basement. Without reporting this second conversation to Horn, and without Horn’s knowledge, Timmons and his men proceeded to move the beam to a position near the opening in the floor, so that it could be lowered from that point into the basement. TMs was done by placing pieces of iron pipe under one flange of the beam to serve as rollers, and the beam was then pushed along the floor towards the opening. As the beam thus moved near the opening in the floor, it turned over and fell through the opening upon McNamara. Suit was brought by the administrator against Horn, Bushnell and Mason. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, a motion was made by each defendant for a peremptory instruction in his favor. These motions were denied. The same motions were renewed at the close of all the evidence; whereupon, the court directed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty as to the defendants Bushnell and Mason, but denied the motion as to Horn. The jury found Horn guilty and assessed the damages at six thousand dollars.

It is urged by counsel for the defendant that at the time of the accident Timmons and his men were not the servants of Horn, but were the servants of Bushnell and Mason, upon the principle announced in Consolidated Fireworks Co. v. Koehl, 190 Ill. 145, at page 149, towit: “It is well settled that one who is the general servant of another may be lent or hired by his master to another for some special service, so as to become, as to that service, the servant of such third party.” But in the same case it is further said: “The test is whether, in the particular service which he is engaged to perform, he continues liable to the direction and control of his master or becomes subject to that of the party to whom he is lent or hired. * * * ‘He is the master who has the choice, control and direction of the servants. The master remains liable to strangers for the negligence of his servants, unless he abandons their control to the hirer.’ ” In this case, the evidence shows, without contradiction, that the work which Horn’s men were doing at the time of the accident was work which was included in Horn’s subcontract. It is not claimed that there is any evidence tending to prove that Bushnell or Mason had any power to control or direct the manner in which Horn’s men should do their work, except to see that the work done complied with the contract. In other words, it is not claimed in this court that Horn did not occupy the position of an independent contractor as to the work included in his contract. The claim is that the men who handled the steel beam were not in Horn’s employ at the time of the accident, because all the work they did after they had finished moving the derrick was being done on Sunday at the request of Mason without Horn’s knowledge, consent or authority, and contrary to his express instructions not to work on that day. It appears from the evidence, however, without contradiction or explanation on the part of Horn, that although Horn did not know, prior to the accident, that his men continued at work, at Mason’s request, after they had finished moving the derrick, still, after he had been fully informed of that fact and its consequences, he presented a bill to Bushnell and Mason for the amount due under the arrangement between the men and Mason, for the <£overtime,” or Sunday work, of the men, including the time when the accident occurred, that he collected the amount of the bill, and that he paid the men double time for all the time they worked that day. These facts being undisputed, they present, in our opinion, a clear case of ratification by Horn of the acts of his men in doing his work on Sunday. The request and agreement of Mason, as thus ratified and approved by Horn, made no change in the contract relations previously existing between them, except to increase the contract price by the amount required to pay for the overtime for Sunday work by Horn’s men. Horn did not thereby £ £ abandon the control ’ ’ of his men to Mason. The men thereby did not become any more subject to the directions and control of Mason than before. They continued liable, as before, to the direction and control of Horn, as an independent contractor. As Horn approved the agreement which his men in his absence made with Mason, the legal effect of that agreement was to continue their employment as Horn’s servants during the overtime as fully as if he had himself directed them to work at that time.

It is contended that the trial court erred in refusing to give several instructions requested by the defendant.

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Related

Consolidated Fireworks Co. of America v. Koehl
60 N.E. 87 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1901)
Lasher v. Littell
67 N.E. 372 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
186 Ill. App. 74, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crotty-v-horn-illappct-1914.