Lichtenstein v. L. Fish Furniture Co.

272 Ill. 191
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 191 (Lichtenstein v. L. Fish Furniture Co.) 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
Lichtenstein v. L. Fish Furniture Co., 272 Ill. 191 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Sophie Lichtenstein and Thomas E. Hunt, administrators of the estate of Ethel Lichtenstein, recovered a judgment in the superior court of Cook county against the L. Eish Furniture Company for damages by the death of said Ethel Lichtenstein, an employee of defendant, charged to have been caused by the failure of the defendant to comply with the provisions of section 14 of the act entitled “An act to provide for the health, safety and comfort of employees in factories, mercantile establishments, mills and workshops in this State, and to provide for the enforcement thereof.-”' (Laws of 1909, p. 202.) A writ of error was sued out of this court to bring the record here for review on the ground that section 14 violates constitutional rights.

The validity of section 14 is questioned by the same assignments of error and arguments as were assigned and argued in the case of Greene v. Fish Furniture Co. {ante, p. 148,) in which, for reasons satisfactory to the court, the section has been held valid and free from constitutional objection. In that case William S. Greene, who lost his life in the fire which occurred in the building occupied by the plaintiff in error, was a checking clerk employed in the office of the company on the sixth floor and Ethel Lichtenstein was a stenographer employed in the same office. She was burned to death at the same time and under exactly the same circumstances as Greene and other employees in the office, whose bodies were found together on the floor of the office near the front windows of the building. The facts stated in that case were proved at the trial of this case, and being the same, neither ■ time nor space will be 'taken to re-state them.

The death of Ethel Lichtenstein occurred on March 25, 1910, and the recovery was had upon two counts filed on May 20, 1914, charging a violation of section 14. To these counts the defendant filed a plea of the Statute of Limitations, and the plaintiffs demurred to the plea. The demurrer was never disposed of and no order of the court concerning it was made, but the twentieth assignment of error is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the plea of the Statute of Limitations. Inconsistently with that assignment counsel state in the points' relied upon for reversal that the demurrer having never been disposed of and the plaintiffs having by the demurrer admitted the fact alleged in the plea, it was admitted that the cause of action alleged in the counts was barred by the statute. That conclusion does not follow. The trial had been entered upon and continued to a conclusion. The plea of the Statute of Limitations was to be tried by the court by the record to determine whether the cause of action stated in the additional counts was a new cause of action. If the court found that a new cause of action had been stated that would have ended the case, and if the defendant wanted the benefit of its plea it should have had a judgment on it. The original declaration, consisting of five counts, was not before the jury. The first four were eliminated at the close of the plaintiffs’ case by instructions to disregard them, and the fifth was amended and a demurrer sustained to that count, so that the additional counts were the only ones left in the record. The action of the court in proceeding with the trial and sustaining the cause of action was equivalent to a ruling on the demurrer, and the twentieth assignment of error cannot be sustained for the reason that the additional counts were not subject.to the plea. The fifth count, among other averments-of fact, alleged that the fire escape on the sixth floor of the building, at the west end of the same, was the only fire escape provided by the defendant in the building and that the defendant negligently obstructed the passageway or approach to the fire escape. These allegations stated duties imposed by section 14, and the most that can be said against the count is that it was a defective statement of a cause of action under the section. The fact that the allegations were made in combination with other averments showing negligence of the defendant does not affect the question whether the additional count stated a cause of action not before stated.

It is contended that the court improperly permitted counsel for plaintiffs to show that the deceased was careful in her movements, and an examination of a witness of the habits of Greene is copied in the argument. There is nothing on the page of the abstract referred to in the argument about any examination concerning the habits of Ethel Lichtenstein or anyone else, and it is apparent that the argument relates to another case,—probably the one above referred to, which seems to have been confused with this one in the statement of the amount of the verdict and otherwise.

It is urged that the attorney for the plaintiffs made an improper argument to the jury on the question whether the approaches to the fire escape were blocked. Proof was made, without objection, as to the number of employees in the office and how many escaped and how many perished and what desperate efforts they made in seeking to escape. After they vainly sought an avenue of escape one of the men jumped out of a window on the north side and alighted on a skylight of an adjoining building two stories below and escaped while the others lost their lives. These facts tended to support the claim that the aisles wrere piled with mattresses, furniture and other obstructions preventing access to the fire escape, and the argument was proper.

Errors are assigned and argued respecting the giving of instructions. The ultimate questions of fact submitted to the jury were whether the defendant had failed to comply with the provisions of section 14; if so, whether such failure was the proximate cause of the death of Ethel Lichtenstein; and if those facts were found in favor of the plaintiffs, what was the amount of damage. Counsel presented to the court 107 instructions to enlighten the jury as to the law to be applied to the facts, the plaintiffs offering 58 and the defendant 49. This was a gross abuse of the privilege of tendering instructions to advise the jury as to the law and the right of recovery under it. Seventy-four of these instructions were either not the lav/ or not applicable to the case or repetitions, and after examination by the court they were refused. The court gave the remaining 33, of which the plaintiffs had tendered 13 and the defendant 20. They covered every conceivable aspect of the case, with the addition of all the cautionary instructions proper to be given in any case. There was no proposition of law presented on the part of the defendant to which it was entitled which was refused.

It is urged that instructions 3 and 7 should have been given. No. 3 stated that if the fire escape in the rear of the building was constructed pursuant to the provisions of the statute and was free from obstructions it constituted one reasonable and sufficient means of escape in case of fire; and the seventh, invading the province of the jury, stated that the fire escape was constructed pursuant to the statute and constituted one reasonably sufficient means of escape. The only condition stated in either was that the fire escape was built pursuant to the provisions of the statute, which would be understood to mean in consequence of the statute, regardless of how it was constructed.

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Bluebook (online)
272 Ill. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lichtenstein-v-l-fish-furniture-co-ill-1916.