Donohue v. George W. Stiles Construction Co.

214 Ill. App. 82, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 196
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1919
DocketGen. No. 24,169
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 214 Ill. App. 82 (Donohue v. George W. Stiles Construction Co.) 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
Donohue v. George W. Stiles Construction Co., 214 Ill. App. 82, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 196 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to recover for personal injuries brought by appellee Donohue against William W. Horn, and two corporations, George W. Stiles Construction Company, and A. Bolter’s Sons. The suit was dismissed as to A. Bolter’s Sons, and proceeded to verdict and judgment for $4,500 against the other two defendants, only one of which, the Stiles Construction Company, has appealed.

The Stiles Construction Company contracted with the United States government to make certain repairs in its post office building at Chicag’o, which included an intermediate floor about 15 feet above the floor in the mail carriers’ room, where plaintiff, a mail carrier, was engaged when injured. Said company sublet to A. Bolter’s Sons to furnish and erect complete in place all necessary structural steel work in accordance with the specifications in its contract with the government, and the latter corporation sublet the' work of erection to defendant Horn. In accordance with these arrangements, all of which were in writing, A. Bolter’s Sons fabricated the steel and delivered it just outside the building. Horn, in pursuance of his contract, took the steel from where it was so left into the building and erected it in place. In the course of the work of erection, one "of Horn’s employees while astride a steel beam that had been put in place to be riveted, dropped a wrench on plaintiff while he in the course of his employment as such mail carrier was passing beneath it. The pointed handle of the tool pierced his skull and a portion of his brain, causing injuries that affected his sight, hearing, memory, nervous system, and capacity for labor for several months.

The original declaration contains two counts, the first charging that the work was negligently conducted by each of the defendants, and the second, that they failed to use or place proper means of protection to avoid injury. Four additional counts aver that the Stiles Construction Company was an original contractor and Horn a subcontractor, and that the former “retained full and complete supervision of the erection of the said iron work,” the first two charging the same negligence, respectively as the two original counts, the third, failure in the duty to give reasonable warnings to the government employees of approaching danger and risk of injury, and the fourth is predicated upon an act to provide for the protection and safety of persons in and about the construction, etc., of buildings, approved June 3, 1907. All counts charge that the acts and negligence were those of each of the defendants through their employees, and that the work of bolting’ and fastening the steel beams was carried on over the heads of the government employees, including plaintiff, while carrying on their work, and that said employees were required, with knowledge .of defendants, to continue their work and frequently pass beneath the construction during its progress.

The defendants filed a plea of general issue, and a special plea, denying possession, control, etc. Horn offered no evidence, and the Stiles Construction Company asked for a directed verdict at the close of the evidence.

1. Appellee urges first that Horn was an independent contractor, and we think the evidence so shows. It is undisputed that the men working on the beams were hired and paid by Horn and worked under the directions of his foreman. The Stiles Construction Company had a superintendent, or foreman, who supervised different work under the contract performed by appellant and who testified, as did Horn’s foreman, that he had nothing to do with, gave no directions to, and exercised no control over, Horn’s men or the work they were engaged in performing. While one of the government employees, testifying for appellee, said he heard a man (who possibly might answer the description of the Stiles Construction Company’s superintendent) give orders to men working on the beams, he did not state what the orders were, and the person giving them was not identified otherwise than by a vague description. That there were such orders was, in the form stated, a mere conclusion of the witness, and as the burden of proof rested on plaintiff to show appellant’s exercise of control, and finds no support except in such testimony, it cannot be deemed of a character to overcome direct and explicit evidence to the contrary by both the company’s superintendent and Horn’s foreman.

“The right to control the negligent servant is the test by which it is to be determined whether the relation of master and servant exists.” (Pioneer Fireproof Const. Co. v. Hansen, 176 Ill. 100.) Or, as stated in Maredosia Levee & Drainage Dist. v. Industrial Commission, 285 Ill. 68, and Decatur Railway & Light Co. v. Industrial Board, 276 Ill. 472: “The principal test as to whether one is an employee or an independent contractor lies in the degree of control retained and exercised by the person for whom the work is being done.” We find nothing in the evidence that legitimately tends to show any such supervision or control, or retention of it by appellant as takes the case out of the rule of independent contractor.

Appellee points out, as indicative of such control, various parts of the specifications in the government contract which provide for the supervision of the work by the government custodian of the building; that he “must be consulted as to the time and manner of performing the work”; that “the work shall be done so as to cause the least interference with the public business”; that “no subcontractor or other person furnishing material or labor to the contractor wSl be recognized”; that the contractor “will be responsible for all damages to person or property which may occur in connection with or incident to the transaction of the work,” furnish all labor, materials, tools, scaffolding, “drop cloths, etc.,” necessary for the proper execution and inspection of the work, keep a competent foreman or superintendent on the ground at all times during the progress of the work “to receive instructions and with authority to act for the contractor”; that the government shall reserve certain rights to make changes in the work, to require the contractor to discontinue services of any unskilful or objectionable workman employed on the work, and to suspend any portion of the work when inexpedient to carry it on. Other provisions, less important, need not be referred to.

We think none of these provisions, of itself, supports the rule of respondeat superior. We refrain from reciting authorities applicable to each. They may be found in a note on the subject in 65 L. R. A. pp. 475-483. What was said in Foster v. City of Chicago, 197 Ill. 264, of very similar provisions in a contract with the city, appears to be applicable here,— that they did not include the direction, management and control by the city of every detail of the work, but only such supervisory power as the city might, from time to time, find necessary to exercise to insure compliance with the contract and to obtain the result called for thereby. The court said: “The difference between an independent contractor and a mere servant is not determined solely by the retention of a certain kind or degree of supervision by the employer.” The rule of independent contractor was held to apply.

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Bluebook (online)
214 Ill. App. 82, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donohue-v-george-w-stiles-construction-co-illappct-1919.