Libby, McNeill & Libby v. Kearney

124 Ill. App. 339, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 39
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 18, 1906
DocketGen. No. 11,872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 Ill. App. 339 (Libby, McNeill & Libby v. Kearney) 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
Libby, McNeill & Libby v. Kearney, 124 Ill. App. 339, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 39 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The view that we take of this case compels us to reverse and remand it for another trial, on the ground that the plaintiff did not prove his right to recover by a preponderance of the evidence. As it will probably be retried, we shall discuss the evidence but very briefly. Before doing so to any extent, however, there are other matters covered by the assignments of error which we should dispose of.

The assignments of error which complain of the sustaining of the plaintiff’s demurrer to. the pleas of the Statute of Limitations filed by the defendant to the additional counts of the plaintiff’s declaration, are not well taken. The error, if committed, was not reversible error.

We are not prepared to say that the first and second additional counts do not state different causes of action from each other and from the original declaration and the third additional count. We think they do. The gist of both the original declaration and of the third additional count is the respective allegations therein of the duty of defendant to instruct the plaintiff in the operation of the sausage machine and its dangers, and the neglect of that duty. The gist of the first additional count is the allegation of the duty of the, defendant to furnish some matting, burlap, or other material to make the place where plaintiff was ordered to work safe for him to do so, and its breach of that duty. That of the second additional count is the allegation of the duty of the defendant to allow the lever which controlled the belt on the machine to remain free and unattached, and the breach of that duty by causing the lever to be tied.

But the record shows conclusively and- without contradiction that Kearney, the plaintiff, did not become twenty-one years of age until July 28, 1900, and that the additional counts were filed in time before the period of limitation had expired. The bringing of a suit by next friend during the plaintiff’s minority on one cause of action, certainly does not waive the right secured by statute to the infant to sue after he comes of age on another. If plaintiff had, instead of demurring, replied alleging his age, the replications must necessarily have been sustained. Sustaining the demurrer, therefore, was not injurious nor cause for reversal.

We think the complaints made of alleged objectionable remarks by the trial judge in the presence of the jury are frivolous. If utterances like those complained of were ground for reversal, dumb men only would be satisfactory judges.

There is not, in the action of the court in relation to the evidence which defendant insists was objectionable, any ground for reversal. The testimony of the witness Houle concerning meeting the attorney for an accident insurance company, was not, under the circumstances and in the line of inquiry in which it was brought out, inadmissible or objectionable. That of the same witness in relation to the removal and rebuilding of the machine after the accident was objectionable, but it was stricken out. As we feel obliged to reverse the judgment and remand the case on other grounds, we need not discuss the probable or possible effect of this testimony. We should not have found in it, considering the action of the court upon it, sufficient ground for reversal. The proposition that it was error in the trial court to refuse to compel plaintiff, at the close of his evidence to elect “as between the declaration originally filed in the case and the additional counts * * * upon which he. will seek to recover against the defendant,” although made in the assignment of errors is not argued by appellant, and must he considered waived. It has no merit.

The same thing may be said of the point made in the assignment of error in relation to the action of the trial court on the motion in arrest of judgment. It is waived by not being argued, and is untenable in any event.

ITor is any question made by appellant in its argument of the amount of the verdict. The assignment of error which, involves it may therefore he dismissed from consideration.

The elimination from the questions raised in this appeal of the foregoing matters brings us to the consideration of its substantial merits. Defendant urges first that the case should have been taken from the jury at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and it not having been so disposed of then, the same action should have been taken by "the trial court at the conclusion of all the evidence. This contention involves the assignments of error which directly express it, and also the claim that refused instructions 52 to 55, which are directions to find for the defendant on each count respectively, should have all been given. The grounds of it urged by appellant are, first, that the evidence clearly shows that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence materially contributing to the accident by his method of feeding the meat into the machine; secondly, that the evidence shows that the plaintiff had worked at and about the machine for several months and knew all about its mechanism, that any dangers in its operation were obvious and known to him; that he in consequence assumed them, and that the employer was under no obligation to instruct him in relation to them; thirdly, that the defendant’s promise, if made, to make the place where the plaintiff was ordered and obliged to work safer, by furnishing him burlap as a matting to stand on, was not “a promise to repair” in any such sense as avoided the assumption of risk by the plaintiff; fourthly, that the evidence clearly showed that the fastening of the shift lever to keep the belt on the pulley had nothing to do with the accident to the plaintiff; fifthly, that there was no evidence of any such especial or specific order to the plaintiff to do the work, in which he was injured, as relieved him from the assumption of risk or required his especial instruction in any operation or handling of the machine which mangled him.

The first of these grounds goes to the right of plaintiff to recover under any of the counts of the declaration. Of the others, each ground relates to his right to recover under a particular one of the four counts. The answer made hy the appellee to all is the same. It is, that in each case the contention of the defendant involves a question of fact which was for the jury, and that in each case there was evidence to go to the jury in support of the plaintiff’s side of the controversy.

Under the law as it is firmly established in this State (Woodman v. Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, 211 Ill., 578), that if there be any evidence whatever which, with all reasonable inferences and intendments to be drawn therefrom, fairly tends to support the verdict, the case should go to the jury, we think the appellee is justified in this position as to all the defendant’s contentions in this regard but one.

We cannot find in the record any evidence which fairly tends to establish any liability under the second additional count. It plainly appears that the fastening of the lever to hold the belt on the tight pulley while meat was being fed to it, was practically necessary to the operation of the machine, and that the plaintiff knew that the lever was kept hitched while the machine was running, and that while with that knowledge he was feeding the machine, an accident entirely disconnected with the fact that the lever was so fastened deprived him of his arm.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gavlin v. Adventist Bolingbrook Hospital
2022 IL App (3d) 200282 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2022)
Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Fowler
138 Ill. App. 352 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 Ill. App. 339, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/libby-mcneill-libby-v-kearney-illappct-1906.