John Rissman & Son v. Industrial Commission

154 N.E. 203, 323 Ill. 459
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 16624. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 203 (John Rissman & Son v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Rissman & Son v. Industrial Commission, 154 N.E. 203, 323 Ill. 459 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

On March 20, 1923, Dora Howard and William Howard, plaintiffs in error, were awarded compensation by an arbitrator in the sum of $7.50 a week for 220 weeks under paragraph (c) of section 7 of the Workmen’s Compensation act on account of the accidental death of their daughter, Josephine Howard, who had been previous to her death employed to operate a power-driven sewing machine at the overall factory of John Rissman & Son, defendant in error, in Westville, Illinois, from January, 1920, to August 2, 1920, and that they were entitled to receive from respondent $1035 on March 28, 1923, with the remainder in weekly payments beginning one week later. The award was confirmed by the Industrial Commission, and the record of the commission was reviewed by the circuit court of Vermilion county on writ of certiorari and the award of the Industrial Commission was vacated and set aside by the court. This court allowed a writ of error to plaintiffs in error for review of the record.

On August 13, 1920, Josephine Howard died at the home of her said parents in Westville, Illinois, of typhoid fever. She contracted her illness at the factory of defendant in error and by reason thereof ceased work on August 2, 1920. She was twenty years of age at the time of her death and was unmarried. She lived with her parents and gave them her wages, $9.51 a week, for the support of the family, which consisted of the parents, the deceased and six other children, all but one of whom were younger than the deceased. The defendant in error established its overall manufacturing plant in Westville in the fall of 1919. The factory was located in two rooms, which faced the east. The north room had formerly been used as a store and the south room as a saloon. An arched opening was cut in the wall between the two rooms, when the factory was started. About seventy-five women and girls, including deceased, were employed at the factory, and also two men,— one a janitor and the other a foreman. In the southwest corner of the north room there were partitioned off in that room two toilet rooms, — one for the women and girls and one for the men. In the women’s toilet room there were two long sinks, with water faucets and drains, three toilets, and clothes hooks and nails on the walls for the hanging of coats, hats and towels. The water was supplied to the toilet rooms through pipes from an old well in the rear of the premises by an electric pump. The sewage and used water from the toilet rooms were carried underground to a dry well on the rear of the premises, near an alley. This dry well was probably twenty-five or thirty feet from the well from which the water was pumped. To the rear of the north room of the factory there was an old abandoned privy, the vault of which was about fifteen feet from the well from which the water was pumped and in which vault a large amount of excreta had been voided. The water pumped to the toilet rooms, as aforesaid, had been used for drinking purposes b.y the employees of the factory until some time in January or February, 1920, when some of the employees complained that it was dirty and did not taste well. Thereafter the janitor carried drinking water from a well known in the record as the Shimkus well, which was located on a lot to the south and west of the factory lot and about 150 feet from the factory. It was carried in two buckets, which were placed on a platform or bench in the west end of the north room of the factory, and the employees were warned not to drink water from the faucets. In the latter part of May or the first of June, 1920, a large glass water cooler on a stand, with a container for ice around the mouth of the water bottle, was installed and the drinking water placed in it. The water was obtained from the Shimkus well until July 19, when, on orders from the factory foreman, the water was obtained from a well of one Dr. Williams. There was a tin cup furnished in the washroom when water was drunk there, and this cup was later kept at the water cooler. Some of the employees furnished glasses, and the employees drank from the tin cup and from each other’s glasses promiscuously during the summer. One employee testified that the water furnished for drinking after they quit drinking the water from the faucets was not good; that the water bottle looked dirty and had streaks in it; that the janitor kept one of the buckets in which he carried water in the men’s toilet room and the other under the water cooler. The janitor denied the keeping of either one of the buckets in the men’s toilet room. He testified that after the first of February to the latter part of July he got all of the drinking water from the Shimkus well and rinsed the water bottle out daily; that he began getting water from Dr. Williams’ well in July on orders from Mr. Jobe, the foreman, who said the Shimkus water was not good. Another witness testified that he talked to Mr. Jobe, the factory foreman, in August or September, 1920, and that Jobe told him that defendant in error had had an analysis of the water made and found that it contained typhoid germs, but that he did not say what water was analyzed. Mr. Jobe testified that the company had an analysis of the wrater of a well other than the factory well made after August 1, 1920, but because of objections was not permitted to state what water was analyzed or the result of the analysis. Specimens of the water from the factory well taken in the first part of August, 1920, on analysis were found to contain colon bacilli. The analysis for colon bacilli showed “2 plus.” The record shows that two families used the water of the Shimkus well during the year 1920 and for two years prior thereto, and that no member of these families during that time had typhoid or para-typhoid fever.

All of the employees used the women’s washroom several times a day. During the summer the time for lunch was shortened to thirty minutes so that they might quit work earlier in the afternoon, and during this time the women and girls brought their lunch to work and ate it in the factory. Towels were supplied in the washroom. It appears, however, that but two clean towels were furnished every second day. These towels were not large and became very dirty before being replaced with clean ones. They were often found on the floor of the washroom, where they had fallen from the nails on which they were hung or had been thrown on the floor. About the middle of July, 1920, the employees of the factory began to take sick with typhoid or para-typhoid fever, and between July 15 and the middle of August from thirty-eight to forty-one of the employees in the factory became sick with one of those diseases. No cases of typhoid or para-typhoid fever in Westville were reported or known to the physicians testifying, in July or August, 1920, except those cases of the employees of defendant in error. In September or October there were two or three cases of the disease in the families of employees of defendant in error who had had the disease.

Westville is a village having from 2500 to 3000 inhabitants. It has no waterworks or sewage disposal system. The largest sewer there is a storm sewer from three to four blocks long, extending along Main street north and south and then running east a short distance and emptying into an open ditch. One school building had its outside toilets connected with this sewer so that the overflow would be carried into the sewer. Offensive odors are sometimes given off by this sewer and it is flushed out by the fire department.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 203, 323 Ill. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-rissman-son-v-industrial-commission-ill-1926.