Heide v. Schubert

166 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1333
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1912
DocketGen. No. 15,920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 Ill. App. 586 (Heide v. Schubert) 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
Heide v. Schubert, 166 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1333 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baldwin

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $1,000 in favor of appellee, in a suit for personal injuries brought in the Superior Court of Cook county by John Heide (appellee), against Albert E. Schubert (appellant), based upon an injury received by appel-lee on the 27th day of January, 1904, by falling through a coal hole, upon the premises of appellant.

It appears that appellant was conducting a saloon located on Cottage G-rove avenue and Sixty-third street; that upon the back porch of said saloon there was an upright door, leading through a partition, the entrance and opening into the coal hole. This partition, in which the door was located, was under a stairway that came down from the second story of the building to this back porch. Inside the stairway, at its sill, there was a strip of flooring about fifteen inches wide extending out over the coal hole to that extent, the remainder of the coal hole being left uncovered; and when the coal was to be put into the basement of the building, the door was opened and the coal thrown in and down through this opening. Just inside of the upright door (which was of the size of an ordinary door), and on the wall of the building, there was an electric switch, which controlled an electric sign over the side entrance to the saloon. There was also an electric meter just inside the door, from which the employes of the Electric Light Company took its readings. The electric switch was near enough to the door so that it was not necessary to go inside to turn it on. When not in use the door was kept closed and locked with a padlock, and the key kept in the pocket of the appellant. This key was necessary whenever the door was to be opened, which was only when the switch was to be-turned on for the purpose of illuminating the electric sign at the side entrance, and also when the meter was to be read by the employes of the Electric Light Company, as well as when coal was delivered at the premises. The coal hole was so situated that coal thrown into it would fall within a few feet of the furnace. The distance from the opening in the floor to the bottom of the coal hole was about six feet. Between the coal hole and the furnace there was a stone partition in the basement, in which there were two openings, one of which was about one and one-half feet from the furnace. The coal in the basement was shoveled from this latter opening directly into the furnace.

Heide had been employed as bartender for appellant for about five months prior to the date of the accident. In the discharge of his duties he was frequently in and out of the family room, and out on this back porch, and it appears that during the five months he repeatedly saw this door which opened into the coal hole.

Appellee’s testimony upon the trial was to the effect that on the evening in question he was directed by appellant to turn on the electric light, and that appellant then handed him a key with which to unlock the padlock on the door; that this .occurred while appellant was sitting at a table in the saloon; that ap-pellee never knew what the door was for; that, in going to turn on the lights he walked through the saloon and out upon the back porch, where there were no lights and where he says he had never been before; that with the key which appellant handed him he unlocked the door, opened it, and felt around to find the-switch; that in trying to find it he took a step inside and fell down into the coal hole, and received severe injuries.

We are asked to reverse the judgment in this case upon several grounds; principally upon the ground that the verdict of the jury is against the clear weight and preponderance of the evidence, upon the question of the negligence of the defendant, and whether the plaintiff was at the time of the accident in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety. It is also complained that the court below erred in permitting the attorney for appellee to read from a stenographic report of a portion of the testimony while making his argument to the jury; and also that the amount of damages is excessive.

Considering these contentions in their reverse order, we are of the opinion that upon the testimony offered for the plaintiff, the injuries received justified a verdict for the amount fixed by the jury if appellant was liable for the accident.

As to the alleged error on the part of the court in permitting the attorney for appellee to read to the jury from a stenographic report of the testimony while making his argument, we think the contention is without substantial merit. It is undoubtedly true that, upon objection made, the court should not permit the reading .from a stenographic report of the testimony, nor from any other memoranda or report made of it during the trial. In this case, however, it appears that only a small portion of the testimony was thus read, and that even this was done because appellant’s attorney, while addressing the jury, himself read to it what he claimed to have written down as a statement of a witness at the time it was given, whereupon counsel for appellee read from the stenographic report of the evidence a portion of the testimony of the same witness. Of this the appellant may not now complain.

The principal contention of appellant that the verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence is a far more serious proposition. The declaration charged negligence on the part of appellant in that while he was the owner and occupier of the premises in question with the coal hole underneath the stairway, and knowing that the plaintiff was not familiar with it, that he did then and there wrongfully permit the hole to he and remain without any covering whatsoever ; that to operate the .switch controlling the electric light was outside the employment of appellee, and that he had never been told or had any knowledge that the hole underneath the stairway was uncovered, notwithstanding which he was given the key to the door hy appellant, and directed to turn on the electric light, without being informed as to the hole, and that in attempting to do as directed he stepped into the coal hole and was seriously injured.

From the testimony it appears that appellee had been employed as bartender, with general duties about the premises, for five or six months prior to .the accident, and it does not affirmatively appear that appellee had ever theretofore turned on the electric switch.

From appellee’s testimony it appears it was not his duty to turn it on. As to whether or not he was then directed to turn it on by appellant, there is a direct conflict in the testimony. Appellee testified: “In the rear of the house there was an electric sign, which shows ladies entrance. It wasn’t lit yet, so I called Mr. Schubert’s attention to it, and Mr. Schubert handed me a key and told me to go out and turn on the lights. * * * I went out, tried to turn them on. I unlocked the door, stepped in and felt around with my left hand, and when I was stepping down I went in on the coal. I had never been there before.”

Opposed to this testimony of appellee is the testimony of Schubert, appellant, and of one Chris W. Minnick. Appellant testified that on the evening in question, “I said to Mr. Heide, ‘It is seven o’clock; go off your watch, your time is up.’ He said ‘I am in no hurry.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heide-v-schubert-illappct-1912.