Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields

146 Ill. 603
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 146 Ill. 603 (Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields) 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
Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields, 146 Ill. 603 (Ill. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the Second District, affirming a judgment of the circuit court of Will county, rendered against appellant, in favor of appellee, in an action to recover damages for the loss of a leg while the appellee was engaged in the service of the appellant. The case has been twice tried. The first judgment was reversed on the ground that the declaration was insufficient. (Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields, 134 Ill. 209.) After the cause was remanded the declaration was amended, and a second trial resulted in a judgment for $5000 for the plaintiff, which was affirmed in the Appellate Court. The opinion of the Appellate Court contains a full statement of the facts, and it will not be necessary to .repeat them here.

It was averred in the second count of the declaration: “And for that, whereas, on, to-wit, the tenth day of August, A. D. 1887, the defendant was possessed of and operating a certain mill, known as a converting mill, at the county aforesaid, in which converting mill molten steel was poured from certain ladles into certain large molds, and said molds were by the servants of defendant placed and deposited in various positions upon the floor of said mill; and on, to-wit, the date aforesaid, plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, and it was, among other things, the duty of plaintiff to repair a certain-railroad track within said converting mill, and the plaintiff avers that it was then and there the duty of the defendant to-keep all appliances and material near to said railroad track in a secure and safe condition, so that the same should be reasonably safe for employes who, in the discharge of their duties, were engaged in working upon said railroad track; and on, to-wit, the date aforesaid, the plaintiff was, in the discharge of his duty aforesaid, and in the exercise of ordinary care and caution, engaged in repairing said railroad track within said converting mill; and on, to-wit, the date aforesaid, the defendant, by its agents and servants, who were not then and there fellow-servants of the said plaintiff, nor consociated with him, the said plaintiff, in the performance of his duties for the said defendant, carelessly and negligently placed and deposited a certain iron mold filled with steel, and of great weight, to-wit, of the weight of three tons, upon one end, and leaning against certain other molds near to said railroad track, and in an insecure and unsafe position, and suffered and permitted the same to remain in such unsafe and insecure position for, to-wit, the period of three hours, and while the plaintiff was so engaged in repairing said track, said iron mold, by reason of its unsafe and insecure position, slipped and fell upon said railroad track, and upon the right leg and foot of the plaintiff, crushing and breaking the foot, ankle and bones of plaintiff’s leg in such a manner that the same had to be amputated below the knee joint, by means of which,” etc.

Under this and other counts of the declaration, which were similar, it is first contended that no negligence on the part of the defendant was proven, and hence no recovery could be had. It is said in the argument that the evidence merely discloses the fact that an accident happened,—that the mold fell and plaintiff was injured,—and from this it is argued that no negligence was established. As between master and servant it may be conceded that no presumption of negligence arises, on the part of the master, from the mere fact that the servant has been injured while in his employ. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Houck, 72 Ill. 287; Kuhns v. Railway Co. 70 Iowa, 561; Baltimore Elevator v. Neal, 65 Md. 438; Sack v. Dolese, 137 Ill. 139; East St. Louis Packing Co. v. Hightower, 92 id. 139.) In an action of this character it is necessary to aver and prove negligence on the part of the defendant, and if the record disclosed the fact that plaintiff merely proved the falling of the mold, and the injury, the judgment could not be sustained. But from a careful examination of the evidence found in the record we do not think the position of counsel is borne out by the facts as detailed by the witnesses.

The Joliet Steel Company, as appears from the evidence, has in its mill yard and buildings constituting its plant, about eighteen miles of railroad tracks. The plaintiff was foreman of a gang of men who had charge of these tracks, and it was his duty to keep the tracks in repair. When tracks running into a building needed repairs it was usual to make such repairs after the men working in the building had quit work, and the repairs in what was known as the “converting mill” had always been made on Sunday, when no one was working in the building. In the converting mill steel was made from cast-iron into ingots. Molds were provided, in which the ingots were cast. The Appellate Court, from the facts in the record, have given a condensed description of the molds and their use, as follows: “These molds were of cast-iron, ranging in height from four to six feet, open at both ends, about eighteen inches square at the bottom and tapering very slightly to the top, and weighing about a ton each. Each mold was set in the casting pit on a square plate of iron, which was concave on the upper surface, making the ingot, when cast, convex on the bottom. They each held, when full, about, a ton of steel. The ladle was calculated to hold about seven tons and to fill a set of the molds at each charge, but it sometimes happened that the last mold would be partially filled, and this was called a ‘butt mold.’ Adjacent to the pit was a large crane, and after the steel had set in the mold so that it-would retain its shape as an ingot, the molds were pulled off from the ingots by means of the crane, and the ingots were left in the casting pit, still at a white heat. The molds were then swung around and placed on a bed made of railroad iron, for the purpose of cooling them off.” It also appeared from the evidence, that a railway track of the company ran within two or three feet of this place where the molds were placed. After the mold was removed from the ingot, being square on the bottom, it would stand firmly and was not liable to fall over, but if the mold for any reason could not be withdrawn from the ingot, the bottom of the ingot being rounded, it would not stand like an empty mold. It often occurred that a butt mold could not be withdrawn, and on Saturday, July 9, 1887, when those in charge undertook to remove the molds from the last heat, they found one mold containing a butt, which could not be removed. The empty molds were removed by the use of the crane, and raised out of the pit' and placed, standing, on the rail-bed. The mold containing the butt was also hoisted, and left standing with the empty molds. After the men in the mill had quit work and left the mill, the plaintiff came in to repair a rail near where the molds were standing, and he had only removed a few shovels of dirt from the defective rail when the butt mold fell over on the track and crushed his leg.

As respects the empty molds, there was no negligence in placing them as they were placed, because when empty they would stand firmly, and were not liable to fall, and thus endanger any person who might be required to labor near where they were placed. But it was different in regard to the butt molds. James M.

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146 Ill. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joliet-steel-co-v-shields-ill-1893.