Jannusch v. Weber Bros. Metal Works

249 Ill. App. 1, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 19
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 14, 1928
DocketGen. No. 32,348
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 1 (Jannusch v. Weber Bros. Metal Works) 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
Jannusch v. Weber Bros. Metal Works, 249 Ill. App. 1, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 19 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff sued and filed a declaration which averred that plaintiff was employed by defendant for a year and a half prior to and including January, 1925, and that while so employed in defendant’s metal spinning establishment, as a direct result of the wilful violation and failure of defendant to comply with the Occupational Diseases Act (Cahill’s St. ch. 48, ¶185 et seq.; Smith-Hurd’s Ill. Rev. St. 1927, ch. 48, p. 1309), plaintiff became infected with an occupational disease peculiar to the work and process of polishing and buffing in which he was engaged, to wit, pulmonary tuberculosis.

The defendant filed a plea of the general issue. There was a trial by jury and a verdict finding the defendant guilty and assessing plaintiff’s damages at $5,000, upon which the court entered judgment.

Defendant first contends the proof did not show that plaintiff contracted an industrial disease at defendant’s plant.

The evidence for plaintiff tended to show that plaintiff, at that time a boy 16 years of age, began to work for the defendant in April, 1923; that his hours of employment were from 7:45 to 5:00, with a half hour for lunch, and he received wages of $28.80 a week; that plaintiff was born on a farm at West Northfield, Illinois, and lived there until he was through school, having graduated when he was between 12 and 13 years of age. His father died in 1921, and so far as plaintiff knows his death was caused by asthma. Plaintiff has four brothers living, one brother dead, two sisters living, and two dead. He left the farm when he was between 13 and 14 years of age, and his health up to that time was good. He then went to work in a greenhouse and did general work, planting, watering and looking after the flowers. He worked there about a year and then went to his brother-in-law’s on a farm and stayed there until he was 16 years of age. During most of that time he was out of doors doing farm work. His health was good and he was not ill during that time. He has four brothers living, and so far as he knows they are all healthy and able-bodied. His sisters are also in good health. One of them lives on a farm and the other in Des Plaines. One brother died when plaintiff was about a year old. He does not know what was the cause of his death. In 1918 one sister died, he thought of the flu, during the flu epidemic. She had been sick about two weeks. The other sister died in 1924 of tuberculosis while she was living in Des Plaines. She was married and did not live with plaintiff and had not lived with him for about two years. His mother died of cancer of the stomach. Just before plaintiff went to work for defendant, he worked about a month for the Benjamin Electric Company. He was examined for insurance and was passed. The doctor examined his lungs with a stethoscope and gave him a physical examination. This was about six months before he went to work for defendant.

Plaintiff began work with defendant as a blank cutter, that is, he cut discs that were used for spinning. These w;ere metal discs of different lands of metal and were cut inshape for the metal finishers, just flat discs of different sizes and also round. Machines were used in doing this work — two small wheels close together, turning around. There was no dust created by that process.

After that time plaintiff started spinning, working on a lathe in the same room and working the same hours. His work consisted of using an object to get the thing into a certain shape. He used emery cloth because sometimes the object would be scratched or be uneven and the cloth was used to take the scratches ‘ out of it. Each job had a number and he marked the number of hours that he worked on the job. He worked as a spinner for a year or a little more and during that time he sometimes used the emery cloth six or seven hours, or more if it was a big job. The average time the emery cloth was used during a week would be about 16 or 18 hours for one person. The size of the emery cloth used would depend on the size of the job. The emery would gradually wear off. It would take about a minute for the emery to wear off on one spot in doing this work. He used the emery cloth by holding it in his hands against the object. That would take the scratches out of the metal and brighten it up. He says:

< < ipherg wag (jugt created by that process, enough to get our clothes full. You could see it in the air and you could see it on your clothes. It would not exactly get into your clothes, but it would be spread out in the air by flying around in the air. My face was about eighteen inches away from the object. Some of the dust would fly upward and some downward. We wore shop coats and I noticed some on the caps and I noticed dust around on the floor. The floor right by the lathe was swept up after we got through with each job. There was a janitor there that did the sweeping. He would sweep up after each job unless there was a big pile of trimmings or something near the lathe. When he swept up, the trimmings that we had cut off of the spinnings would be on the floor.”

The first time plaintiff had trouble with his lungs was along in November or December of 1924, when he started to cough, which he had never done before except when he had a cold. He kept on working until the latter part of January, 1925, when he went to Dr. Myers at Des Plaines, Illinois, and after that to Dr. Bari. He quit work in January, stayed home for about two weeks and then went to the County Hospital for several weeks. From there he went to the Municipal Sanitarium, where he was at the time of the trial.

He said that he had no hemorrhages of blood from his lungs and that the symptoms he had were just the cough and the raising of sputum. While he worked for defendant he used the machine at various things, and when he was not using the emery cloth there were other machines, 12 or 14, close by and some one else would be using the emery cloth, so that the emery polishing and buffing would be going on most of the time on one or more of the machines.

Medical "testimony was introduced to the effect that tuberculosis was one of the most widespread diseases known and is found in almost all parts of the civilized world; that it is an infectious disease and that it is usually transmitted by direct contact, drinking milk or by taking in other food which happens to have the germ in it, such as butter, cheese and tubercular meat, or in inhaling air which has the tubercular germ. About 10 per cent of all deaths in cities are brought about by tuberculosis. In practically everyone some tuberculosis development is found. Tuberculosis is not hereditary, strictly speaking. Tuberculosis is a disease produced when' the body is invaded by a germ known as the tubercle bacillus. In dwellers in cities micro-organism is practically present in 90 per cent, at least, of adults, but it is not active. It is active in only a relatively small proportion of the population. The chief sources of the disease are exposure, contact and drinking of tubercular milk. Any occupation where dust is produced is hazardous because it lights up and brings about tubercular disease by irritating the lungs or irritating the glands in the neck, but some kinds of dust are more dangerous than others. Some varieties of dust or particles have sharp edges and they damage the lung tissue to a greater degree than others, while some varieties of dust are of a poisonous nature.

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Bluebook (online)
249 Ill. App. 1, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jannusch-v-weber-bros-metal-works-illappct-1928.