Diamond Glue Co. v. Wietzychowski

125 Ill. App. 277, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 232
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 15, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,249
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 Ill. App. 277 (Diamond Glue Co. v. Wietzychowski) 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
Diamond Glue Co. v. Wietzychowski, 125 Ill. App. 277, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 232 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in this case, Wietzychowski, had been for several years in the employ of the defendant, The Diamond Glue Company, at the time of his injuries: During several hours each morning his work was running the freight elevator by the falling of which -he was injured. He would take glue stock and material from the basement to the second and third floors in trucks run upon the elevator platform, and bring down whatever was needed below. After his work on the elevator stopped at 11 or 12 o’clock, “the boss” would tell him to do something else, and he would work with “the gang,” generally in loading material on the trucks and taking it to the wash mill on the first floor to be washed.

The building at the place where the elevator ran consisted of three stories, and above this a working platform. The elevator consisted of an open wooden platform about six feet by nine, composed of a frame of two by eight timbers, upon which was laid a two inch floor sustained by upright iron side pieces operating in a slide in guide posts at the side of the shaft and being connected at the top by a cross-beam, the entire elevator being sustained by means of a seven-eighths inch wire cable, fastened to this cross-beam. Attached to the cross-beam was a spring intended, in case the cable should break, to operate safety appliances called dogs at the bottom of the elevator. The cable extended to sheaves and gear work in the dome of the building over the working platform, then back to the drums on the second floor, which drums were operated by belts and pulleys. The elevator was also supplied with a cable to start and stop it, and was adjusted so that it stopped automatically on reaching either the top or the bottom floor. Glue stock or material to be taken from the first to the third floors was loaded into trucks somewhat smaller in dimension than the elevator platform and about four feet in depth, the trucks were then pushed on to the elevator by appellee and others and hoisted.

On the morning of March 12, 1904, the plaintiff had taken two truck loads of material from the first to the third floor, the first being somewhat smaller and the second about the same size as the third. The third was placed upon the elevator, the plaintiff got upon the platform thereof to ride with the load, pulled the rope to start the elevator, and stood there until after passing the second floor, when the hoisting cable broke, the elevator fell to the first floor, the truck was broken, and part of it striking the plaintiff injured him.

Thus-far there is no contention between the parties as to the facts. Those which relate to the alleged negligence of the defendant, bringing about the accident, and to the extent of plaintiff’s injuries are in dispute.

The negligence claimed by the declaration is that the ropes, chains, cables and appliances of the elevator had been suffered to become worn out and defective, and that the foreman ordered the plaintiff to run the elevator, and although the plaintiff had no knowledge of the running of elevators, failed to warn him of the dangers incident thereto.

The evidence to support these claims is first and chiefly the undisputed fact that without warning and with no extraneous cause apparent, the elevator while in passage fell more than a story on account of the breaking of a hoisting rope or cable, which ought to have been, but was not, strong enough to hold it, and that the so-called “dogs” with which the elevator was supplied did not act. These “dogs” were automatic devices which if they are working properly are thrown out in case the cable breaks, and gripping the slides in the guide posts stop, the elevator, or at least materially break the fall. It is vigorously argued by counsel for appellant that the breaking of the cable and the failure of the dogs to work, even though with no apparent cause extrinsic to their own condition, are no evidence of negligence on the part of their owner, because this is not a case for the application of the principle “Res ipsa loquiturBut without invoking that principle, evidence of the way in which the accident happened and the apparent absence of any efficient cause for the action.or non-action of mechanical appliances involved in the accident, other than their defective condition, is proper for consideration in connection with such other evidence of their condition as is produced. Slack v. Harris, 200 Ill., 96-113.

While the mere fact that an employe has been injured is not sufficient to establish that an employer was guilty of negligence and may have no tendency to show that the injury was the result of negligence on the part of the employer, yet the manner of and circumstances under which an injury was received may furnish proof of such negligence. Spring Valley Coal Co. v. Buzis, 213 Ill., 341.

Besides the circumstances of the accident and the statement of plaintiff that the cable was at least five years old, there is in the record bearing on this question of defendant’s negligence, in connection with the condition of the elevator appliances, the testimony of William C. Holway, an elevator inspector employed by the city, the testimony of Joseph Tomaszewski, a fellow employe of the plaintiff, and that of Joseph Leonard, an engineer in defendant’s employment, of Charles Babe, another employe, arid of W. H. Morehead, the defendant’s superintendent.

Holway’s testimony as given was, that four days after the accident he.saw the safety devices, the dogs, the spring and lever. He said, “They were all rusted and not in working order. * * * I could tell they were not in working order because they were so rusted out. * * * I could see they were out of order entirely. I was not absolutely sure whether they would have worked or not except from the way they looked to me. I told them that on account of the condition in that line of business—there was so much dampness and salt in the atmosphere—that they ought to take great care of their cables and paint all the iron work. Everything was so rusted about the elevator I ordered everything to be painted in .the shape of iron around it except the cables, and they should be oiled.”

Before so testifying, Holway, after stating that he was an elevator inspector of the city, said that “without referring to memoranda he had no independent recollection of the condition of the elevator, but that he had a memorandum that would refresh his memory about it.” He produced and was allowed to read the memorandum, and after doing so swore that he then remembered the condition of the elevator, but could not describe it exactly. He then testified as before set forth. On cross-examination he said that the memorandum from which he refreshed his memory was made by him and was in his handwriting, but had been in the custody of the Building Department in the City Hall. The examination and the rulings of the court on the testimony then proceeded thus:

“Q. You say that aside from that memorandum you had no recollection whatever of anything that you saw at the plant of the Diamond Glue Company? A. Well, no; except as I said before, the surroundings, the dampness and all that and the rest that I saw.

Q. But you have no recollection whatever concerning the condition of the safety dogs or the cable or anything else until you looked at that paper? A. Ho, sir; I did not.

Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Ill. App. 277, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-glue-co-v-wietzychowski-illappct-1906.