Illinois Steel Co. v. Jenco

136 Ill. App. 555, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 660
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 10, 1907
DocketGen. No. 4,835
StatusPublished

This text of 136 Ill. App. 555 (Illinois Steel Co. v. Jenco) 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
Illinois Steel Co. v. Jenco, 136 Ill. App. 555, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 660 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is admitted in the record that about five o’clock on the morning of May 21, 1906, Michael Jankovich, an employee of appellant, was burned by an explosion of hot flue dust and injured so that he died on May 24th, leaving a widow and infant children. The evidence shows that in smelting iron ore in blast furnaces a large amount of dust is created and blown out by the blast; that much of this dust is unmelted ore and is saved and run through the furnace again; that appellant’s furnaces Nos. 1 and 2 are fifty or sixty feet apart; that No. 1 is eighty-five feet high and twenty feet in diameter; that a dust catcher is connected with the top of the furnace to catch the dust out of the gas; that the blast is heated in what is termed the “stove,” which is a structure fifteen feet in diameter and seventy-five feet high; that the dust catcher connected with furnace Ho. 1 is located on the south side of the stove and is a circular structure of about the same height and diameter as the stove, and is constructed of hrick; that there were three openings at the bottom of the dust catcher about three or four feet wide and seven feet high, or of sufficient size to permit a man to wheel a loaded wheelbarrow through them; that one of these openings was on the east, one on the southwest and one on the northwest; that in the interior of the dust catcher was a funnel-shaped receptacle called the “down comer” which received the dust as it fell from the flues; that at the bottom of the funnel was a “bell” valve worked by a lever, which when raised permitted the collected dust to run out; that the stockhouse wall is eight or ten feet west of the dust catcher and is twenty-five feet high; that north of the dust catcher was a wall connected with the stockhouse wall extending east and west and about one hundred feet high; that there were no doors or openings in either wall; that the dust catcher was located about twenty feet southeast of the angle formed by these two walls, and in this angle was a hot blast shanty about six by eight feet and seven feet high, in which was kept the pyrometer which was used to indicate the heat of the furnace; that the door to this shanty was on the south side of it, with a window on the east side; that the pyrometer for furnace Ho. 1 was inside this shanty, with its face towards and less than a foot from the window, lighted by an electric light so that it could be read from the outside; that up to about a year before this accident the red hot flue dust had been dumped on the floor of the dust catcher from the “down comer” and shoveled into wheelbarrows and removed in that way, but about a year before the accident a chute, seven or eight feet wide at the top but smaller at the bottom, was put in, leading from the bottom of the dust catcher down into the stock-house which was located underneath the floor of the stove and dust catcher, with a slide in the bottom of the chute so that when dust was wanted the slide would be opened and the dust would run out into buggies below; that this chute dispensed with the use of the wheelbarrows and men for removing the dust through the opening, hut they had not been closed in any way; that during the daytime a man was in charge of the dust catcher whose duty it was to empty the “down comer” through the bell valve into the chute at regular intervals; that during the night no person had this duty but it was done by whatever employee the foreman ordered to empty it; that J anlcovich, the deceased, was the night man who had charge of the hot blast and he had a helper Bazik; that the pyrometers had to be read every fifteen minutes and a record kept of them in shanty lío. 2, which was the one Jankovich had charge of, while Bazik looked after lío. 1, and if either one did not have time to read his pyrometer the other read and recorded it; that the foreman under whom Jankovich and his helper worked was Andrew Benson; that the foreman of the stockhouse, which was on the lower floor, was McGoogin, who had nothing to do with Jankovich or his helper; that when Jankovich and his helper came to work the evening before the accident they took their dinner pails and coats into shanty Ho. 1, and there was a burst of dust at that time which frightened Jankovich, who had worked there several years; that at half-past eleven the night of the accident Jankovich, upon the order of Benson, had emptied the “down comer” into the chute, and the foreman from the stockhouse turned a hose on the dust, sticking it into the dust and leaving it there with the water running from the hose into the dust; that at the time of the explosion some of the men in the stockhouse below opened the slide in the chute to run the dust into a buggy, and this appears to have in some way, by mixing the water or saturated dust with the red hot dust, caused a very violent explosion, which threw the dust up the chute into the dust catcher and out through the northwest opening and into shanty lío. 1, the door of which was in line with the northwest opening of the dust catcher, covering the floor of the shanty with red hot dust to a depth of two or three feet. J anlcovich, who at the time the explosion occurred, was in this shanty for some reason which is not definitely shown by the proof, was so burned by the dust that he died. While it was the duty of Bazik to read the pyrometer, yet the evidence tends to show that sometimes one did it for the other, and Bazik being a helper, Janovich was responsible for the performance of the duties of Bazik. Bazik testifies that it was necessary to go inside the shanty very often to wipe the dust off the window so that the pyrometer could he read. Bazik was at the time of this explosion on his way to the shanty to read the pyrometer, and Jankovich received his injuries while in the shanty, from an explosion caused by the acts of a foreman, who was in no way connected with him.

Uo question is raised or argued either as to the sufficiency of the declaration, the admission of evidence, or upon the giving, modifying or refusing instructions, except it is contended that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant at the close of appellee’s evidence: “First, because Jankovich assumed the risk of explosions from hot dust around this dust catcher, they not being uncommon occurrences; second, because by his failure to turn on the water properly, and by going into the shanty without the exercise of ordinary care, he contributed to the injury; and third, because Jankovich was a fellow-servant of the man whose handling of the hose may have caused the injury.”

The only question for us to pass upon is, can the judgment be sustained upon the evidence? The evidence of Benson, Jankovich’s foreman, was that he never had known such an explosion to occur before the one that killed Jankovich. All that he had known was that Jankovich told him that evening, “they said something blowing there” and he thought the furnace had made a slip, and opened thé bell and let down some dust. That was the only time he knew of it before this accident. It was not the duty of Jankovich to dump the “down comer,” except as he was ordered to by his foreman. There was an employee charged with that duty in the daytime. It was seldom done at night, but when dust was required at night the foreman of the stockhouse would send word to Jankovich’s foreman, and he would order the hot blast men to dump the “down comer.” There was a water pipe around the bell valve that was turned on and sprinkled water while the “down comer” was being dumped.

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Related

North Chicago Rolling Mill Co. v. Johnson
29 N.E. 186 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
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77 N.E. 190 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 555, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-steel-co-v-jenco-illappct-1907.