Gunning System v. LaPointe

113 Ill. App. 405, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 571
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 1904
DocketGen. No. 11,235
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 Ill. App. 405 (Gunning System v. LaPointe) 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
Gunning System v. LaPointe, 113 Ill. App. 405, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 571 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee sued appellant in case for negligence per quod appellee was injured. The jury found for appellee and assessed his damages at the sum of $13,250, from which $3,250 was remitted, and judgment -was rendered for $10,000. The accident which occasioned appellee’s injuries occurred February 23, 1901, at about 4:30 o’clock in the afternoon. The appellant was engaged in the business of advertising in Chicago, Illinois, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin-, by means of painting signs on bulletin boards. Mr. E. G-. Gunning, appellant’s manager, testified that a billboard is posted on, and a bulletin board is painted on. The board which was being used at the time of the accident hereinafter mentioned, was a bulletin board, although frequently referred to by witnesses as a billboard. Appellee’s business was that of a sign painter’s helper. He commenced working' for appellant in Chicago in the year 1898, and worked for it from that time till February 23, 1901, the date of the accident. For about nine or ten months before the accident appellee had done painting for appellant outside its shop in Chicago, working as a helper. Prior to said time he had worked in the shop, in Chicago.

Otto Eeich, appellant’s treasurer, and who had charge of sending appellant’s employes to work out of Chicago, no other person having such authority except Mr. Gunning, who, as Eeich testified, never attended to that part of the business, sent appellee to Milwaukee, giving him a mileage book, and telling him to report to Mr. Fromm, who would give him all instructions. Fromm was appellee’s foreman, and testified that he directed appellee what to do, by authority from appellant’s office. Fromm and appellee went to Milwaukee, and, by Eeich’s directions, as Fromm testified, reported to Frank Fitzgerald, and Fitzgerald directed as to what board they should paint, what should be painted on it, and where it was. On Tuesday, February 18, 1901, in the afternoon, appellee and Fromm went to the board in question, and appellee, in attempting to swing up a scaffold on which to stand to paint, discovered that the board was shaky, and that there was no band on top of it, and told Fromm about this, when Fromm said they would finish coating the space on which they were working, and then report to Fitzgerald, and, after they quit work that evening, they so did. Fromm’s testimony as to what occurred between him and Fitzgerald is, substantially, that he saw Fitzgerald Tuesday evening and told him the board was not safe, that it was not properly put up, and that it should be repaired, and that Fitzgerald gave him a short answer, and told him to come around in the morning; that the next morning about eight o’clock he and appellee went to Fitzgerald’s office, and he told Fitzgerald that the board was shaky and that something must be done to it, if he wanted them to work on it, and Fitzgerald said that he, Fromm, was always kicking about the boards not being right, when witness said that he had to work on the boards, and, if anything happened, he would be hurt and not Fitzgerald; and that he also told Fitzgerald that there was no piece on the front of the board, no moulding around the front of it, and no band on it, and Fitzgerald said that if that was all that was wanted he would have the band put on, and told him to goto work, which he did. Fromm further testified that appellee, while the conversation with Fitzgerald occurred, was standing there listening to it, but took no part in it; that he had no right to interfere. Appellee’s testimony as to what occurred in Fitzgerald’s office on Wednesday morning is, in substance, the same as Fromm’s. Appellee testified that Fromm told Fitzgerald that the board was not properly braced, and that there was no band along on the top of it, to protect the hooks, and that Fitzgerald said to Fromm that he was always kicking, and that he had better go back to work, when Fromm said he would not until Fitzgerald fixed the sign, and that Fitzgerald then said, if that was all he wanted, for him to go back to work and be would have the band put on. The bulletin board was constructed along two sides of a building on the northwest corner of Milwaukee and Wisconsin streets, in Milwaukee, and was a total length of about 260 feet, 130 feet of it fronting on each of said streets. It was constructed of tongued and grooved boards an inch thick and four or five inches wide, nailed to two cross-pieces one by three inches, the crosspieces being each about two and one-half feet from the ends of the boards. There was no cross-piece in front, and no slip or band along the top ends of the tongued and grooved boards. When the board was in position it was braced in the rear next to the building, and its plain surface fronted the street and its top was about twenty-three and its bottom fifteen feet from the ground. The scaffold on which the men worked while painting consisted of a ladder twenty-twro feet long by eighteen to twenty-four inches wide, along the rungs or steps of which a board was laid; ropes were attached to this ladder at each end, which passed through pulleys in blocks, and the upper block, Avhen the scaffold Avas swung, was attached to an iron hook, Avhich hook Avas placed over the top end of the board. One end of each of the ropes which passed through the upper pulleys hung doAvn, and when fastened kept the scaffold in position. The ropes could also be used to raise or lower the scaffold by means of the pulleys. A bumper was used to keep the scaffold about eighteen inches from the front of the bulletin board. The hooks used are described in appellant’s argument as being S shaped, about a foot and a half in length, half an inch thick and seATen inches across from one of the points or ends to the nearest part of the body. Fromm left appellee at work about two o’clock Saturday afternoon and Avent to Chicago, so that appellee was alone at the time of the accident. Fitzgerald had not caused a band to be placed on the board. Appellee thus describes the accident: “ Well, I had just put my paint on the scaffold. The scaffold was on the ground at first, and I put my paint on and pulled her up from the ground, up to the signboard, right below the bottom, and tied my ropes upon the uprights which was holding this roof that was, below the sign to protect the people. Then I got the eighteen-foot ladder and leaned it against the signboard, and I went upon the ladder and got upon the scaffold and pulled up the east end about a foot, which gave me about four feet of slack rope, and I made my hitch; that is, I tied my ropes to the scaffold. Then I went to the west end and pulled that about the same height, and tied my ropes. I was just about going to turn around to go down again, when I heard something break, and I looked up and I seen the hook pulling through the board; that is, breaking a part of the board out, and coining down upon me. I didn’t remember anything else after that. The top part of the hook pulled through. It came down upon a slant. The point didn’t break through the sign; the top of the hook broke through it. At time of accident my ladder was about eighteen inches to two feet above the bottom of the board. I fell a distance of about fourteen or fifteen feet.”

A witness who saw appellee fall testified that he fell backwards onto the street, with his face upwards.

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Bluebook (online)
113 Ill. App. 405, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunning-system-v-lapointe-illappct-1904.