Holmberg v. City of Chicago

244 Ill. App. 505, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 195
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 13, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,320
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 244 Ill. App. 505 (Holmberg v. City of Chicago) 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
Holmberg v. City of Chicago, 244 Ill. App. 505, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 195 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for damages brought -by the plaintiff, Harry S. Holmberg, as the administrator of the estate of his son, Roy H. Holmberg. The action is based on the claim that the death of his son Roy was caused by the defendants’ negligence in creating and permitting a large pile of sand to be built up and remain in a public street. There was a trial before the court, with a jury, and a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $6,000. This appeal is from that judgment.

In the fall of 1922, one Anderson undertook the erection of a 15-apartment building on the southeast corner of Pinegrove and Oakdale Avenues, in Chicago. Bair stow, the defendant, had the contract to do the necessary excavating. He removed the top soil and carted it away. In doing that work, he used a steam shovel. On the Saturday morning before Thanksgiving Day, in 1922, he began the work of further excavation, using a teamster with a team of horses and a two-handle scoop. The scoop held from 5 to 7 cubic feet of sand. After getting the scoop full of sand, the teamster would drive the team out into the parkway, on the Pinegrove Avenue side, and near the south end of the building site, then turn north and dump the scoop, and then turn back to the excavation, and repeat the operation. The teamster continued to work until late Monday afternoon. The sand which he had removed and placed in the street made a pile extending north and south along the east side of Pinegrove Avenue, probably more than 50 feet in length. Its height was probably something over 8 feet (several witnesses placed the height from 6 to 7 feet, one from 9 to 10 feet, and one at “a good ten”). The top of the pile was somewhat crushed down, owing to the team of horses and the scoop passing over it from end to end. The sides of the pile sloped away to the east and to the west at the angle in which the sand normally, as a matter of gravity, came to rest, and on the east side, the bottom of the pile ran along the west side of the sidewalk. On the west side, the bottom of the pile extended west probably beyond the middle of the street, the street being about 32 feet from curb to curb.

Boy Holmberg, a boy 11 years of age, lived on Oak-dale Avenue, half a block west of Pinegrove Avenue. About 7.30 Wednesday evening, November 29, 1922, the day before Thanksgiving, being at home with his brothers and sisters, his parents having gone to see a friend, he put on his hat and went out, saying that he was going for some sand. About 9 o’clock, when his parents returned, he was still absent. They were alarmed, and began a search for him, which continued through the night. About six o ’clock the next morning, the boy’s father found his body on and partly in the sand pile. A milkman, who went to the father’s assistance, testified that when he first saw the father, the latter “was standing on top of the sand pile. * * * he had pulled the boy out of a little hole,— he was lying in it”; that the hole was “very near the top” of the sand pile, — “nearly the center from north to south,” and “about the center from east to west.” He further testified that the boy’s head was toward the east, and his body was on the west side of the sand pile, west of the street side of the sand pile.

In describing his discovery of his son’s body, the father testified, “There was a straight slope out possibly about two feet and a straight slope from the top, * * * I saw the shoes with his toes turned down. I saw his stockings, his trousers and part of his waist sticking out, and the rest of his body was in a sort of a hole that sloped up. The sand pile, where he was lying, was on the level, and this spot had a slight slope on this side. * * * it covered him to the bottom of his waist. * * * It was partially sticking out.”

No evidence was submitted as to just how the boy’s head and shoulders and the upper part of his trunk came to be covered with sand. However, it would seem to be a justifiable inference from the testimony quoted above that he dug a hole or . tunnel in the sand pile west of its north and south center line and very near the top, making, as his father described it, “a sort of a hole that curved up, — sloped up,” and that, as he was digging this hole or tunnel, and had the upper part of his body, including his arms, in the hole he had dug, the sand above and around caved in and suffocated him. The coroner’s physician gave it as his opinion that death was due to suffocation.

The declaration contained five counts. The plaintiff, to sustain the judgment, relies on the fourth count. That count charges that the defendants permitted this sand pile to remain in the street for a long space of time in such shape and formation “that divers parts thereof were likely to slip, cave in and fall”; that it was attractive to children and that many of them, with defendants’ knowledge and consent, played on it while it remained in this dangerous condition; that defendants, carelessly and negligently, failed to “guard or protect children in any manner from coming in contact with the pile of sand while in such dangerous shape and formation,” by means whereof the boy while using ordinary care for his own safety, and without fault or negligence on the part of his parents, was suffocated and lost his life, when “a large quantity of sand caved in, slipped, slid and fell upon” him.

There is no contention that the boy’s parents were guilty of negligence. The testimony is that he was of a careful disposition and that his mother had cautioned him about keeping away from the excavation being made at the place in question. In our opinion, the contention of defendants that the boy was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law is not tenable. At most, from the standpoint of the defendants, it was a question for the jury to pass upon, from all the evidence. As our Supreme Court has repeatedly said, “The law is clearly established by great weight of authority, that between the ages of seven and fourteen the question of culpability of the child is an open question of fact and must be left to the jury to determine, taking into consideration the age, capacity, intelligence and experience of the child.” Maskaliunas v. Chicago & W. I. R. Co., 318 Ill. 142.

The chief question in the case is whether the defendants were guilty of negligence. It may be assumed, as a matter of common knowledge, that a pile of sand, especially when located on a public street, would prove attractive to the children of the neighborhood. That it did so prove, in fact, is shown by the testimony of the witness Anderson, the owner of the property in question, who testified that several times he had seen children about the sand pile digging caves, and had chased them away. The question then arises, Did the sand pile, in the form in which it was permitted to remain in and along Pine Grove Avenue for some days, present a dangerous situation? And further, Should the defendants have been forewarned, when reasonably considering the matter, that if the sand pile were permitted to remain as it was,- injury was likely to occur to some child who might be there to play?

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Bluebook (online)
244 Ill. App. 505, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmberg-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-1927.