Gunning System v. Lapointe

72 N.E. 393, 212 Ill. 274
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 393 (Gunning System v. Lapointe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunning System v. Lapointe, 72 N.E. 393, 212 Ill. 274 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Ch-iEE Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the ■ court:

This action is brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by appellee through appellant’s alleged negligence. On the trial in the circuit court of Cook county the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff (appellee here) for the sum of $13,250. ' The trial court, on motion for a new trial, directed a remittitur of $3250, and judgment was entered for $10,000, which was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the First District, and a further appeal is prosecuted to this court.

The facts as shown by the record are, briefly, as follows: On February 23, 1901, Charles Lapointe (appellee) was working for the Gunning System (appellant) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, his business being that of a sign painter. The company had recently erected a bulletin board in Milwaukee, and appellee had been sent there from Chicago to assist a man by the name of Fromm in painting this board. Fromm had for ten years been a foreman for the Gunning System and its predecessor. Appellee had worked for the company between two and three years and had worked as sign painter for about ten months. A few days before the appellee was injured he was directed by Mr. Reich, who was general foreman for the Gunning System, to go to Milwaukee and report there to Fromm, and was told that he would receive all his instructions from Fromm, who was to be his immediate foreman. Appellee and Fromm arrived in Milwaukee on Sunday, the 17th day of February, and on the following day they called at the office of one Fitzgerald, who was superintendent and manager for appellant in Milwaukee, and were by him directed to the place and informed as to the manner in which they should do their work. They went to the bulletin board on that day and did some work and discovered that the bulletin board was incomplete. On Tuesday they did some additional work, and on Tuesday evening went to Fitzgerald and made complaint about the weakness of the board. It appears from the evidence that the bulletin board was built with tongue and grooved planks one inch thick, set perpendicular, the upright boards being nailed on to two cross-pieces about one inch thick and three inches wide, the upper cross-piece being about two and a half feet from the top and the lower one about the same distance from the bottom of the boards. Braces extended from the cross-pieces back of the boards to the ground. There was no cross-piece over the front of the bill board, nor was there a strip or board running across the top of the bulletin board, as is generally used in the construction of such boards. Fitzgerald directed them to return the following morning, which they did, and then Fromm, in the presence of appellee, told Fitzgerald that the bulletin board needed fixing; that it was shaky and weak, and that he did not think it was safe. He also stated it was not properly braced, and there was no board along on top of the sign board to protect the hook. Fitzgerald then said, “You are always kicking, anyway, every time you come up here, and you better go back and work.” Fromm replied, “I will not till you fix that sign.” Fitzgerald then said, “If that is all you want, go back to work and I will have that band put on for you.” Then Fromm said to Lapointe, “We will go back to work.” The two did return to work and worked Wednesday and Thursday. Friday being a holiday they did not work, and on Saturday Fromm returned to Chicago. Appellee remained at work, and in the afternoon, while he was upon the scaffold, one of the large hooks which were thrown over the top of the boards to hold up the scaffold upon which he stood, pulled through the top of the bulletin board, owing to the top band not having been put in place, allowing one end of the scaffold to fall,"throwing Lapointe from the scaffold to the ground and severely injuring him.

Upon this state of facts plaintiff contends that the assumption of risk which would ordinarily bar his right of action was suspended during the running of the promise to repair and for a reasonable time after the period when it could have been fulfilled. The defendant meets this argument with the assertion that such a promise, if made, would not suspend the risk assumed by the employee, because it was a promise that could have been fulfilled in an hour and a half’s time, as shown by the evidence, and he having continued in the work for three days after the promise to remedy the defect, thereby assumed the risk.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence the defendant (appellant) asked the court to give a peremptory instruction to find the issues for the defendant, which the court refused to do, and it is assigned as error that the court refused to give said instruction. It is claimed by appellee that the giving of other instructions afterwards, submitting to the jury the question as one of fact whether appellee continued to work on the board longer than a reasonable time for the appellant to repair the defect, waives the right to have the question again passed upon as one of law. But in this contention we cannot agree with the appellee, as we have construed the rule of law to be that the giving of the peremptory instruction is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, and saves the question as to whether or not the evidence fairly tends to support plaintiff’s cause of action. (Boyce v. Tallerman, 183 Ill. 115; Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. Dunleavy, 129 id. 132.) And if, as a matter of law, the evidence does tend to fairly support the cause of action the peremptory instruction was properly refused, and if it does not, then it should have been given.

The narrow and concrete question presented by these conflicting claims is whether such a promise as here made at once absolves the employee from the risk which he had theretofore voluntarily assumed, or whether the risk is continued until the time when the master’s promise to repair is fulfilled, and what would constitute a reasonable time for the fulfillment of the promise to repair. We find that the authorities in this State all practically agree. While, as a broad, general proposition, the master is required to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place in which to work, it is also true that if the defect is so open and obvious that the servant does see and know of the existence of the defect, and the danger arising therefrom is apparent and known to him or within the observation of a reasonably prudent man in his situation, and the servant enters upon and continues the work, he is held to assume the risks and hazards of the employment due to such conditions. The servant may, however, in some cases, suspend the operation or force of the rule of assumed risk as to such defects and dangers by complaining to or informing the master thereof and obtaining from him the promise to repair the defects and obviate the danger. It is not in all cases that the servant may relieve himself from the assumption of the risk incident to defects and dangers of which he has full knowledge by exacting from the master a promise to repair.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 393, 212 Ill. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunning-system-v-lapointe-ill-1904.