Devine v. Sproul

177 Ill. App. 563, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1229
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 4, 1913
DocketGen. No. 16,976
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Ill. App. 563 (Devine v. Sproul) 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
Devine v. Sproul, 177 Ill. App. 563, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1229 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee in this case recovered a judgment March 28, 1910, in the Superior Court of Cook county against the appellant, Elliott W. Sproul, which the latter in this appeal seeks to reverse. The appellee Golden died pending this appeal and his administrator has been substituted as appellee. The judgment was rendered on the verdict of a jury in a personal injury case.

Golden was a laborer employed by Sproul, a contractor. Sproul was building under contract a railroad roundhouse. The roundhouse at the time of the accident was not completed. The roof was not on and the walls were not yet entirely finished. In the roundhouse were twelve or thirteen pits, each about 50 feet long, 4 feet wide and 3 or 4 feet deep, so constructed that when finished a locomotive might be run over it, and inspected and repaired by workmen below. These pits were partially finished. The walls were in and in the pit where the accident occurred some spikes were inserted in them. The concrete floor with which it and the others was to be provided had not been built.

The plaintiff Golden and one Casey, his companion in the work, were wheeling sand to be used in the concrete over a single plank runway and dumping it into the various pits. The runway ran from a sand pile south of the roundhouse to the pit to which sand was for the time being carried. The distance was about a hundred and fifty feet. The runway ran north from the sand pile and then in each case apparently when near or opposite to the pit turned sharply to the pit. At all events it did so in the case of the pit that Casey and the plaintiff were working at when the accident occurred. During the day sufficient sand had been carried to three or four of the pits and they were working at another. As the work was completed at each pit a portion of the runway was removed and replaced to make the proper passage to the next one which was to have attention. Just how much was thus' relocated does not appear, but certainly the portion which ran east and west must have been so changed. This runway was made of planks twelve inches wide and of varying lengths. Counsel for the appellant in their argument say “the most of them were from twelve to fourteen feet long.” There was some little variance in the testimony regarding this, but it is immaterial. At the end and middle of each plank was a cross piece and the cross pieces were some six, some eight and some ten inches wide. Two planks met in the middle of the cross piece. From the north and south runway at the place of this accident, there was an east and west continuation of it which ran five feet over the ground and then over the center of the pit lengthwise of it. The cross pieces over the pit extended from one side of the width of it over to the other.

According to the testimony of the plaintiff, introduced without objection on the part of defendant and indeed a part of which was upon cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, a man for the purpose of laying the runway ahead when the pit worked it was changed, pulléd up a part of the runway as it had been used, laid it to the new pit and “nailed it with a hammer.” On cross-examination the plaintiff said, “A man there,nailed and looked after that business.” Further testimony that was offered by plaintiff’s counsel respecting the nailing of the planks other than that concerned in this accident was objected to by the defendant’s counsel and excluded. We think counsel is mistaken in stating in its argument here that “over defendant’s objection plaintiff was allowed to show that the ends of the other plans were nailed to the cross pieces.” But this is immaterial, for in the view we take of this case we think that it was competent, proper and relevant evidence as bearing on the most material question in the case—whether the plaintiff must have so clearly and obviously have known of the danger and risk he was running in working in an unsafe place. If there was error, it was not in admitting the evidence of this nailing of the boards of the runway generally, but in excluding it.

For the pit where the accident happened, Casey and the plaintiff had been going along this board runway with barrows full of sand and coming back to the sand pile with the empty barrows. It was not wide enough to permit two persons to pass on it'. The men worked together, one wheeling his barrow of sand directly after the other north along the runway until they came to the sharp turn to the west, then running over the east and west part of the runway to the part of the pit they were filling. The man who was behind the other in going to the pit preceded him on the return. At the point of turning the narrowness of the way sometimes made the barrow slip off the boards. On the trip when the accident in question here occurred, the plaintiff had preceded Casey onto the pit runway. The plaintiff had dumped his barrow at about the middle of the pit; Casey had dumped his just east of the plaintiff and both proceeded back toward the long runway. Casey was walking west pulling his barrow behind him, while plaintiff was pushing his barrow ahead of him." In making the turn to the long runway Casey’s barrow ran off to the ground. He was then turning south and in jerking the barrow to get it back on the plank it moved the east end of the east plank of the east and west runway about two feet to the south. This particular plank was not nailed to the cross pieces at either end." Therefore when Casey’s action jerked the east end of the plank to the south, the west end, which rested on a cross, piece running across the pit, was swung around to the north. This occurred just as plaintiff’s barrow was going on it. The heavy barrow fell into the pit, dragging the plaintiff after it. He cut his head and face on the spikes sticking out of the wall of the pit and fractured or dislocated a bone in his shoulder.

Golden sued his employer, Sproul. - The gist of his declaration, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue, was a charge of failure on the part of the defendant to use proper care to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to work, the allegation in that regard specifically being that the defendant constructed the runway in question and the plaintiff and others were required by the defendant to run wheelbarrows over it, and that regardless of his duty to use due care to construct and maintain the runwiay in a reasonably safe, secure and proper condition, the defendant constructed and maintained it in an unsafe condition, in that the boards were unfastened and insecure, in consequence of which the plaintiff was injured.

The appellant contends that the declaration states no cause of action, and that á motion in arrest which was made should have been granted, and by his argument and his assignments of error maintains also that the case should have been taken from the jury by a peremptory instruction, and that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.

We are unable to concur in these conclusions. The duty of using ordinary or reasonable care to furnish a reasonably safe place for his servants to work in and reasonably safe appliances to work with is a positive and primary duty, for default in which the master is liable, whether he undertakes its performance personally or through another. Himrod Coal Co. v. Clark, 197 Ill. 514, and cases there cited.

Whether the conditions and appliances are simple or the reverse, the doctrine, well stated in Illinois Steel Co. v. Mann, 100 Ill. App. 367, which but.

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Related

Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Co. v. Shacklet
105 Ill. 364 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1883)
Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Laack
18 L.R.A. 215 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1892)
Himrod Coal Co. v. Clark
64 N.E. 282 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1902)
Illinois Steel Co. v. Mann
100 Ill. App. 367 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. App. 563, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devine-v-sproul-illappct-1913.