Illinois Steel Co. v. Richter

82 Ill. App. 45, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 634
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 30, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Ill. App. 45 (Illinois Steel Co. v. Richter) 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. Richter, 82 Ill. App. 45, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 634 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case by appellee against appellant for an injury to -the person alleged to have been occasioned by appellant’s negligence. The declaration, including an original and amendments thereto, contained six counts,' but the case was tried on the last count only, filed February 24, 1898. In this count it is averred, in substance, as follows : Defendant, January 30, 1896, was possessed of and using a rail mill in the city of Chicago, and plaintiff was employed by defendant as a common laborer in and about a heating furnace in the mill. There was in the mill a hoisting apparatus and steam engine for the hoisting^>f large metal ingots of great weight, which ingots were hoisted by means of hooks or tongs. There was at said time an ordinance of the city of Chicago, which prohibited any person from taking charge of, managing or operating any steam engine or boiler, or any portion of a steam plant, in the city of Chicago, unless duly licensed so to do, under a penalty of not less than $20 nor more than $50 for each offense; and also imposing a penalty on any person, agent, firm, company or corporation, owning or controlling any steam engine, boiler, or steam plant, who should authorize or permit any unlicensed person to have charge of, manage, or operate the same, the penalty being not less than $50, nor more than $200 for each day’s violation of the ordinance. Plaintiff was ordered by the foreman to work at the hoisting apparatus, and to fasten or hook the tongs about the ingots, for the purpose of hoisting them. It was defendant’s duty to provide for plaintiff a safe place in which to work, the'proper tools and appliances, and to have the steam engine under the care and management of a competent and skillful engineer; yet, plaintiff being in the exercise of reasonable care, defendant failed to provide for him a safe place to work, “ and did then and there have said steam hoisting apparatus under the care and charge of an unskillful and incompetent and unlicensed engineer, contrary to the ordinance aforesaid, and not acquainted with the operation and manipulation of the same, and thereby, through the negligence, carelessness and improper conduct of the defendant in this behalf, a certain ingot of iron and steel, of great weight, to wit, of the weight of 1,600 pounds, then and there being hoisted,” etc., fell on the plaintiff, etc.

The defendant pleaded the general issue, and the statute of limitations, to which latter plea a demurrer was sustained. The jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at the sum of $8,000 and judgment was entered on the verdict.

It Will be observed that the only breaches of duty alleged are failure to provide a safe place for plaintiff to work and the employment of an unskillful, incompetent and unlicensed engineer. There is no evidence that the place where appellee worked was an unsafe place for one exercising ordinary care. The only questions, therefore, are, whether the accident occurred by reason of any unskill fulness, incompetence, carelessness or mismanagement of the person operating the engine by means of which and the apparatus connected with it, the ingots were hoisted, and whether such person was unskillful, incompetent, etc. Appellee worked for appellant nine years, and at the time of the accident had been working two years at hoisting ingots. The ingots wnre hoisted for the purpose of piling them on the floor. They were sometimes piled fourteen feet high. The manner of hoisting, so far as the same appears from the evidence, was as follows: There was an upright derrick and a crane extending out from it. There was a cable attached to a drum on the engine which extended out to the end of the crane and was there attached to a heavy pair of iron tongs. At the lower end of each arm of the tongs there was a hole. Through each hole a point was inserted. When it was sought to hoist an ingot the -men would bring the pair of tongs with these points in them together on the ingot, when a signal would be given to the engineer, who was in a shanty about sixty or seventy feet away, to hoist, who, in obedience to the signal, would apply the steam and the ingot would ascend. The tongs operated as. do ice tongs. The men had long iron hooks for the purpose of pulling the ingots around when they were in the tongs and hoisted from the ground, and when they were too high to reach conveniently by the hooks, a rope attached to the crane was used, by means of which the ingot would be swung around as desired.

The accident happened between one and two o’clock p. m., June 30, 1895. There were six men altogether, engaged in the work of hoisting ingots. Nick Sobieski was at the engine sixty to seventy feet distant from the place where the tongs were attached to the ingots. Dive others, of whom the appellee was one, were engaged in placing the tongs on the ingots. One of these five was Joe Nieman, called by appellee his partner, whose duty it was to give signals to Sobieski to hoist or to stop the engine as might be required. Appellee and Martin Drapinski attached the tongs to an ingot about feet long by 16 to 18 inches square and about 2,000 pounds in weight. Appellee says that he and Drapinski then walked away quite a distance from the ingot to give Sobieski a chance to raise it and the signal was given to hoist it. The appellee states as his reason for moving away, “We walked away, so when he takes the ingot up and jerks it, it would not swing and something would not happen.” Nieman, appellee’s partner, says: “ As they hooked the tongs on they walked away, and I give him the signa.1 to hoist up.”

In his examination in chief, appellee thus describes the accident:

“ The day I got hurt w.e worked that forenoon and the afternoon, working and lifting the ingots and putting them away, and he took it and he raised the mgot about three feet, and as he raised the ingot it was caught at the other ingots that was along side of it, and he was jerking it with the derrick, and my partner gave him a signal to stop and he stopped, and I went up and got hold of the ingot and commenced pulling it up and down, trying to loosen it. As I ’ was loosening it the iron jerked up and then it dropped.”

On cross-examination he testified :

“We walked away from the ingot before the engine was started to tighten the cable. We would put the tongs on first and then walk away, and then he would just take and raise it up. Just as soon as we would walk away, then Nieman would give the signal to the engineer to raise it up. This ingot had been raised just before the accident about three and a half feet. It caught at one end on another ingot. The tongs were attached to the ingot that fell, in the mid» die. The ingot went up until it could not go any further, and then it got caught, and then it commenced to jerk, and then he tola him to stop. When it started to go up, the ingot arose in a horizontal position. One end of the ingot caught on those ingots piled up there.

Q. Did the ingot then stop ? A. It was jerking then.

Q. Well, then, did it stop? A. Then Meman gave him the signal to stop.

Q. Then did it stop ? A. Yes, sir.

Q. Then what did you do ? A. I went up and got hold of it and stood up away from it.

The Court: He says he stood up.

The Witness.

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82 Ill. App. 45, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-steel-co-v-richter-illappct-1899.