Illinois Steel Co. v. Mann

100 Ill. App. 367, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 724
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 100 Ill. App. 367 (Illinois Steel Co. v. Mann) 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. Mann, 100 Ill. App. 367, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 724 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice "Waterman

delivered the opinion of the court.

That the floor upon which appellee was working when hurt was not reasonably safe for the work which was being done upon it, has been specially found by the jury. Appellant urges that the principal question involved in this case is whether appellee was induced to remain at work upon this floor by promises of his employer that it should be repaired, and if so, whether he so remained more than a reasonable time for such repairs to be made.

Plaintiff testified:

“John Smith ivas the foreman of the mill. I had a conversation with him shortly before I was hurt in regard to the floor. I told him always to fix—to have it fixed when it was out of place, and he always had it fixed. He said he would have it fixed. The conversation which I spoke of was within two weeks before I was hurt. I had conversations on the subject of the floor previous to that time with Smith frequently. When I had the last conversation with Smith about the floor I didn’t think it was necessary to quit work. I didn’t see any immediate danger. I can not tell how many times during the last year I had conversations with Smith about fixing the floor. It was several. It had always been fixed previous to this time.”

And on cross-examination : “ I worked for five or six years. I made complaint from time to time for five or six years, whenever the plates would get out of shape, so that the buggies could not run off them, and that went on in that way for five or six years, and always in response to this complaint that was the way they would always fix them, by leveling up the plates. They never did take up the plates and cart them away and put new plates in their stead.

Q. Now, when you ..made these complaints during five or six years that you have been talking about, and they did not take away the smooth plates and the warped plates, why didn’t you quit ? A. I would see no danger in working on those plates.

Q. So that for five or six years you had been making complaints, and all they had been doing would be to level up the plates, and you never thought at that time of quitting the service on account of the fact that they did not put new plates in their place ? A. I never thought it was too dangerous—to quit work.

Q. No? A. The plates looked sufficiently level to work on.

So far as I know they fixed that standing after that last complaint just the same as they had fixed them in answer to my complaints for the five or six years that I had been complaining. I was not there to see whether they fixed it or not, but it was in bad condition the day I got hurt.

During the five or six years when I made complaint they fixed it when they got an opportunity to fix it. They could not always fix it in a moment. It is a difficult matter to fix a standing while there are cold buggies running for three furnaces and two other hot buggies going. They had twenty minutes for dinner. During that twenty minutes they could not level up the standing very well, because this buggy—as soon as it was out they wanted them to bring cold steel right in over my standing and .charge it up again. They could run cold ingots right over my stand and put into that furnace that I have just been talking about. They could do it if they seen proper, in the evening. He wouldn’t stop the work to fix it. He could do it on a Sunday without stopping the work.

Q. Sometimes you say they did not fix it right quick, right promptly, during this five or six years that you were complaining—immediately after you complained? A. Ho, of course they wouldn’t.

Q. When they didn’t do it promptly, you didn’t quit, did you? A. Ho, it was not bad enough to make anybody believe that they could get hurt on it.

Q. And didn’t think there was any danger connected with working on that thing ? A. I didn’t think of any danger.

Q. It was not considered among you men there as being dangerous, so that you ought to quit if it was not safe? A. 1 couldn’t see any immediate danger on it.

Q. So if Smith had told you this last time in answer to your complaint, that he could not fix it, or would not, you would have kept on working just the same ? A. I don’t know about that.

Q. You can’t say that you would have quit? You never quit before ? A. They always fixed it before.

Q. But you say sometimes he did not fix it for a long time. A. He would not fix it on the moment.

Q. And you didn’t quit ? A. But he would fix it; it was not sufficiently bad for me to quit. It would be sufficient to have the buggy to get away from the furnace; that is the idea. It would not be so bad but what I could work on it, but it would be so bad that the buggy-man could not get the buggy away from the furnace and caused me to take a paddle and go to the hot furnace and pry that buggy out of the hole and burn my brains out.

Q. Then the complaint you made to Smith was because it made it difficult for you to get an ingot up to the furnace, and not because you thought it was dangerous ? A. Hot because it was dangerous for me.

Q. But it was because you did do your work better if that was perfectly level in getting the ingot up to the furnace ? A. Still, at the same time I was in danger and might not realize it. Buggies ran over one of those plates and hoist it up on the side I was standing, and pushed the other side down; then I was in danger, and didn’t know it. I wanted it level.

Q. You wanted it level so that you could do your work there? A. Yes, sir.

Q. You didn’t tell him that you wanted it level so as to make it safe for .you, did you ? A. I wanted it so - that I could work on it. I always told him that I wanted it fixed so that 1 could put the buggy up there and make it safe to stand on. I wouldn’t sav any immediate danger, of course not. I could do my work better on a level.

Q. You did not complain to Smith at any time that the floor was dangerous for you to work on ? A. Ho, I don’t think I ever put the question to him. I never said anything about the buggy. The reason that I wanted it fixed was partly so that we could get the buggy up to the furnace and my own convenience. Do it with safety anyhow. When my work was done, it was better work on a level. It was more convenient, is what I mean when I say it was better. I want to be understood that at that time I didn’t think there was any immediate danger from that floor while I was working on it. Of course it was dangerous. When I would go to work Monday morning it looked level and looked all right, but during the week these things occur. I didn’t handle the buggy. I wanted it fixed for my own convenience. It was dangerous at the time I spoke to him. I did think it was dangerous at that time. It didn’t look dangerous when I came to work the morning of my injury.

Q. Did it grow more dangerous during that day ? A. It did so.

Q. Then at the morning of the day of the accident it was not dangerous, but it became dangerous during the day; is that right ? A. It was dangerous or else I could not have got hurt on it.

Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Ill. App. 367, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-steel-co-v-mann-illappct-1902.