Lillian Connors, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Jack v. Connors, Sr., Deceased v. United States of America and C. Iber & Sons, Incorporated

917 F.2d 307, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 19341, 1990 WL 165238
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 1990
Docket89-3289
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 917 F.2d 307 (Lillian Connors, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Jack v. Connors, Sr., Deceased v. United States of America and C. Iber & Sons, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lillian Connors, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Jack v. Connors, Sr., Deceased v. United States of America and C. Iber & Sons, Incorporated, 917 F.2d 307, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 19341, 1990 WL 165238 (7th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

Lillian Connors, as special administrator of the estate of Jack V. Connors, Sr., appeals the district court’s judgment in favor of the United States on her claims made pursuant to the Illinois Structural Work Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, pars. 60-69, and the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-2680, for injuries her husband, Jack Connors, suffered prior to his death. We affirm.

I.

Jack Connors was injured on April 13, 1982 while he was employed as a carpenter foreman for C. Iber & Sons, Inc. remodeling portions of a building at the United States Army Corps of Engineers’ Rock Island (Illinois) Arsenal. 1 As a part of the remodeling contract, new windows were installed in Room 122 of Building 104. Connors was the only employee of C. Iber & Sons who was working on the night shift at the time of the accident. C. Iber & Sons was the general contractor on the remodeling project, and it was Connors’ responsibility each day to oversee the work of the various subcontractors working on the *309 project and to hold occasional safety meetings with the night shift employees, pursuant to the requirements of the contract between C. Iber & Sons and the United States. After Connors completed his oversight duties, he began his own work, which consisted of placing wood trim around the areas where new windows had been installed.

Immediately prior to his fall, Jack Connors was standing on an eight-foot ladder measuring the horizontal trim at the “top” of the new windows. Room 122 had a false ceiling which was ten feet, nine inches above the floor at the point where it intersected the windows. The area into which the windows were recessed, along with the windows themselves, extended approximately three feet above the level of the false ceiling. 2 The working plans and specifications Connors was working with were not received at trial. The district court did receive evidence that the remodeling project in Room 122 included the “filling in” of the area above the false ceiling level, with the portion of the window above that level being blocked by a piece of plywood and the false ceiling being extended into the recessed area around the windows, and trim being placed at the ten-foot, nine inch level. The significant disputed fact at trial, and the finding which Connors challenges on appeal, is whether Connors was referring in his deposition and statements to the ten-foot, nine inch level or the fourteen-foot level (the top of the window inside the recessed area) when he referred to measuring at the “top” of the windows immediately prior to his fall. 3 The importance of the factual issue regarding the precise height at which Connors was measuring prior to his fall was not apparent before his death and therefore it was not clarified in his recorded statements.

Jack Connors was measuring for horizontal trim when the step ladder on which he was standing overturned and catapulted him to the floor. The ladder was a freestanding eight-foot step ladder which was placed near the window he was measuring. As Connors reached into the recessed area to measure the horizontal width, he removed one foot from the ladder and, for reasons which are not entirely clear from Connors’ description of the accident, placed that foot on some part of the window frame. At this time the ladder toppled and in the ensuing fall, Connors fractured five ribs on the left side of his body. Shortly thereafter, a blood clot formed in his left leg, ultimately necessitating amputation. The deceased plaintiff-appellant was the only person working in Room 122 the evening of the accident, and thus there were no eye witnesses to the accident. Richard Bump, an employee of an electrical subcontractor who was working in the building that night, testified that he had seen Connors in Room 122. approximately one and one-half hours prior to the fall. Bump stated that he had entered the room to ask Connors a question regarding work to be performed. At this time, Connors was on the third or fourth step from the top of the eight-foot step ladder measuring in and about the recessed area near the window, but the precise nature of what was being measured was unknown to Bump. Bump also stated that he recalled the ladder was placed at an angle, rather than immediately parallel to the wall as Connors had claimed, because there was furniture preventing the placement parallel to the wall. The district court judge stated that he was not convinced that Bump’s recollections provided a totally accurate description of the furniture in the room, because of the time delay between the incident and the trial (seven years) and the fact that his attention would not have been focused on the furniture layout at the time of his visit. James Grimes, one of the Corps of Engineers’ construction inspectors, testified that he had had a conversation with Connors in *310 Room 122 one or two days prior to the accident and had discussed the placement of vertical trim around the windows rather than the horizontal trim which Connors reported measuring when he fell.

Connors filed suit against the United States pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-2680 (“FTCA”), claiming a violation of the Illinois Structural Work Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, pars. 60-69, and common law negligence, alleging that the injuries he suffered resulted from the government’s negligence. His wife Lillian Connors also filed a suit, claiming damages for loss of consortium derivative of Jack Connors’ negligence claim. Illinois law provides the law under which these FTCA claims are to be decided. Hylin v. United States, 715 F.2d 1206, 1210 (7th Cir.1983). The United States filed a third party complaint against C. Iber & Sons, Inc. claiming contractual indemnity for negligent acts of the contractor, pursuant to United States v. Seckinger, 397 U.S. 203, 90 S.Ct. 880, 25 L.Ed.2d 224 (1970).

After a bench trial, the district court rendered an oral decision in favor of the United States on all three counts. Specifically, the court found that the United States was “in charge of” the work being performed by Iber, pursuant to the Illinois Structural Work Act, but had not violated the Structural Work Act because it did not know, nor could its agents reasonably have anticipated, that Jack Connors would step off the ladder, causing it to fall. The court found that Connors had been working at the ten-foot, nine inch level immediately prior to his fall, that the ladder being used was a safe platform from which Connors could perform his work, and that Connors fell because of the unexplained, unanticipated act of Connors himself in transferring his foot from the ladder onto the window frame. Thus, the district court found that Connors’ injuries were not caused by any misdeed on the part of the United States.

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917 F.2d 307, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 19341, 1990 WL 165238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillian-connors-as-special-administrator-of-the-estate-of-jack-v-connors-ca7-1990.