Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields

32 Ill. App. 598, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 185
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 Ill. App. 598 (Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields) 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
Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields, 32 Ill. App. 598, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 185 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Upton, P. J.

This was an action brought by Benjamin Shields, appellee, against the Joliet Steel Works, appellant, to recover damages for the loss of a leg caused by the falling of a mold, in part filled with a steel ingot, called a “butt,” upon his leg, crushing it so that amputation below the knee followed, through the alleged negligence of the appellant’s servants. The injury occurred on the 9th of July, 1887, in the converting mill of the appellant corporation.

The works of the appellant company, which is a corporation duly organized, are quite extensive. Different departments of its business operations are carried on in different buildings situate some distance from each other. The yards of the corporation are traversed by a system of railroad tracks located principally in the yards of the corporation, a portion thereof entering and passing through some of its buildings, in extent measuring about eighteen miles of railway track.

The appellee alleges in his declaration that he was in the employ of the appellant company; that his business was that of a track repairer or foreman of the track-repairing hands or gang engaged in keeping the network of railway tracks in order; that a portion of the appellant’s works or mill was called a converter, wherein certain servants of the appellant were engaged in the handling of molds in the process of the manufacture of steel; that it was the duty of the appellant to place such molds in such a position that the same should not be dangerous to other servants of the appellant engaged in repairing the railway tracks within such converter, etc.; that the servants of appellant engaged in such converter so negligently and carelessly placed a certain mold, partly filled, called a “ butt,” that while appellee was engaged in the performance of his duty in repairing the railway tracks in such converter, etc., using due care, etc., such mold fell upon him and injured him, etc., causing the loss of his leg, etc. The plea was the general issue and joinder therein. The cause was submitted to a jury, who found the issues foxappellee and assessed his damages at $3,000, upon which, after overruling a motion for a new trial, the court below rendered judgment and from which appellant appeals to this court.

In the court below, at the instance of appellant, the jury made a special finding oxx the facts, to the effect that the appellee was not obliged to act in repairing the railway track in the appellant’s converter mill in connection with the employes or foreman of that department wherein such repairs were made; that in placing the “butt” mold which fell, the men employed in the converter mill did not place such mold in the usual and customary mannex-, nor use ordinary care in so placing it; that the mold was not tested to learn if it was liable to fall in the usual and ordinary way, and that the test which was made, was not such an one as an ordinarily prudent man carrying on the same business would have made under the same circumstances; that appellee’s attention was not called to the unsafe condition of the mold before he commenced work in repairing the railway track, nor could he have seen its condition as well as any other employe in the converter mill, had he examined it; that the mold did not fall by reason of the work that appellee or his gang of track repairers did about it. The following facts may be said to be conceded, at least are established by the evidence and are substantially uncontroverted.

The methods in the converting mill are these: At the north side of the building are the convertors in which the steel is made; in front of the converters is the semi-circular casting pit, which is perhaps about two feet below the level of the floor of the building; ranged around the pit, close to its edge, are the molds of iron, square in shape, from forty-two to seventy-two inches in height, tapering slightly from the top to bottom, opened at both ends, weighing from 1,800 to 2,400 pounds; they are placed on á “chair bottom,” or “sole,” which is slightly hollowed in the center, so that the bottom of the ingot is convex in shape; the mol ten steel is turned from the converter into a ladle and from the ladle is poured into each mold, until the set of eight molds is full; at times it happens that there is not enough metal to fill the last mold; this is called a “butt;” so soon as the metal has chilled enough in the mold to retain its shape, the molds are drawn off, leaving the ingots standing upright in the pit, and the molds are placed on one side to cool. At times the mold will not “strip” and the ingot sticks in them when hoisted by the crane; they are then raised and jarred—“ sledged ”—to get the ingot out; if it does not come, the mold and ingot are set one side, in front of the empty molds nearest the railroad track so that they maybe taken at once to the yard and broken up.

“Butts,” stick in the mold as well as full ingots, and this is a daily occurrence. After the molds are set off to cool they are usually tested by the men in charge to see if they will stand, by taking hold of them with a long iron hook and trying to pull them over. If they stand firmly they are considered safe; if they fall they are safe, of course.

At the east end of this converting mill is a rail bed (so called) about twenty feet square, composed of railroad iron, upon which the molds are set, and they are set at other places around the converter, the floor of which is sand. There are five narrow gauge tracks running into and through this converting mill, and the north track at the east side, being the one nearest this rail bed, needed repairs, and on Wednesday preceding the Saturday upon which the injury occurred appellee was directed to repair that track at the earliest possible moment, on the ensuing Saturday, if he could.

On that Saturday afternoon, when the last heat (or the last one but one) in that converter mill, on the east side of the pit, was taken off, and the molds swung to the rail bed to cool, in one of the molds was a “butt” from twenty to twenty-eight inches long which stuck in the bottom of the mold, and this was set on the sand floor in front of the rail bed nearest to the rail track which was directed to be repaired (for convenience in removing the same into the yard, if necessary, to be “ sledged ” or broken up).

This “butt” or mold was about eighteen inches square at the bottom, about sixty-two inches in height, would weigh about 2,000 pounds empty, and was easier to tip over when filled than when empty.

It was left standing on the sand floor, about two feet from the rail track which appellee was directed to repair. About a half hour after the mold was so placed, the workmen and the employes in the converter mill, having ceased work for the day and gone therefrom, appellee with his force of repairers came into the converter and proceeded to take up a rail on the track nearest this “butt” or mold, as required, and in so doing the mold fell upon his leg, inflicting the injury for which this suit is brought.

Appellant contends: 1st. That the declaration tiled in the case at bar does not state a cause of action.

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Related

Joliet Steel Co. v. Shields
45 Ill. App. 453 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 598, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joliet-steel-co-v-shields-illappct-1889.