McCleod v. Nel-Co Corp.

112 N.E.2d 501, 350 Ill. App. 216
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 29, 1953
DocketGen. 10,659
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 112 N.E.2d 501 (McCleod v. Nel-Co Corp.) 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
McCleod v. Nel-Co Corp., 112 N.E.2d 501, 350 Ill. App. 216 (Ill. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

While the plaintiffs were sleeping in a double bed in a room in defendant’s hotel in the City of Rockford, which they had previously rented on a monthly basis, some plaster fell from the ceiling upon them. To recover the damages for the injuries alleged to have been sustained upon this occasion, this action was instituted.

Count one alleged that the defendant owned, operated and managed the Hotel Kelson in the City of Rockford; that the plaintiffs had rented a room in the hotel at $60 per month and were occupying the room which was under the exclusive management, control and possession of the defendant; that about one o’clock on the morning of July 21,1949, after- the plaintiffs had retired, and as the proximate result of the negligencé of defendant, several large pieces of plaster fell on the plaintiffs as they slept, as a result of which Willis J. McCleod was injured. Count two made the same allegations and averred that Mrs. McCleod was injured. The answer of the defendant admitted that it owned, operated, managed and possessed the hotel and invited the public to occupy quarters therein for various periods of time at stipulated rental but denied all other allegations of the complaint. A jury trial resulted in verdicts in favor of the plaintiff, Willis J. McCleod, for $7,500 and in favor of Anna McCleod for $500. After overruling motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdicts and for a new trial, judgment was rendered upon the verdicts and this appeal follows.

The record discloses that in the summer of 1949 Willis McCleod was fifty-five years of age, lived at Lake Villa, and was employed as manager of a Rexair branch office in Rockford. As such manager he sold and serviced vacuum cleaners and trained personnel. He and his wife traveled to and from Lake Villa and Rockford, occasionally staying overnight at the Nelson Hotel in Rockford. On July 19, 1949, in order to have a regular room in Rockford, they rented room 216 at the Nelson Hotel at a monthly rental of $60.

On the evening of July 21, 1949, the McCleods retired about ten o’clock. While asleep, about three hours later, they were awakened by a crash of plaster falling from the ceiling. Both Mr. and Mrs. McCleod were struck by the falling plaster. Mr. McCleod testified that he received a three-inch cut on his head and a three-inch' cut on his left shoulder; that both cuts were bleeding, and he immediately called the desk and Dr. Bernard E. Bolotoff, the house physician, came and dressed the wounds but no stitches were taken. Both appellees testified they were covered with dust and blood and their room was filled with dust. Mrs. McCleod testified that she had an asthmatic condition and that dust was one of her allergies; that her arm and chest were bruised and after the house physician had cared for them and cleaned and dressed their wounds, they were assigned to another room, and later in the morning they went to the hospital at Dr. Bolotoff’s suggestion and X-rays were taken but no fractures were found.

Dr. Bolotoff testified that immediately after the accident he examined appellees and found that Mr. McCleod had a cut on the left side of his head and an abrasion on Ms left shoulder; that he cleansed the wounds with antiseptic and bandaged them; that at this time Mrs. McCleod was upset; that her left arm from elbow up and her left side from her ribs down to her thigh were brrnsed; that he does not recall when the X-rays were taken but he continued to treat both of them for a week or so, and they seemed to be improving satisfactorily; that by the application of heat their pain was relieved and there were no complications.

Appellees remained in Rockford for a month after the accident and then returned to their home in Lake Villa. On September 6, 1949, Mr. McCleod went to his family physician, Dr. Floyd Cannon at Waukegan, who testified that he was engaged in the general practice of medicine, knew appellees and had taken care of them over a period of years; that Mr. McCleod upon his first visit complained of pain in his left shoulder, left neck and left arm; that he treated him with short-wave applications, which afforded no relief, and then used electric heat applications which relieved his pain somewhat; that on November 2, 1949, X-rays were made which showed no fracture; that between September 6, 1949, and December 9, 1949, he treated him thirteen times; that he again treated him four times in August and November, 1950, three times in December, 1951, and three times in March 1952; that he found a scar over the shoulder blade area on the left side of the back; that' Mr. McCleod was unable to lift his left hand above his head as well as he could his right hand, and- that he diagnosed his trouble as. traumatic neuritis or inflammation of the nerves due to injury, and. expressed his opinion that the condition he found may recur as neuritis or arthritis.

Dr. Cannon further testified that Mrs. McCleod came to his office practically every time her husband was there and gave the same history and complained of asthmatic attacks which she said were worse following the accident. Dr. Cannon stated that he had treated her previously and had X-rayed her chest in 1947; that she had an enlarged hypertensive type heart and after the accident he treated her and removed a small tumor, about the size of a walnut, over her left elbow which she did not have prior to the accident. The doctor testified that in his opinion the accident did not cause this tumor but was aggravated by it and that her asthmatic attacks were worse since the accident. For the services of Dr. Cannon, appellees were charged $225, and Dr. Cannon testified that he rendered them bills from time to time and that he kept no record separating the treatments to each and could not separate his charges but it should be about $112.50 for each. Dr. Bolotoft testified that his bill of $56 was submitted to appellant and paid.

The evidence further discloses that the portion of the hotel where room 216 was located was built about 1895; that the room was approximately 12 x 16 feet and the ceiling 16 feet high. Mr. MeCleod testified that the area of the ceiling from which the plaster fell was three feet by six or seven feet and that the plaster was over an inch in thickness. The manager of the hotel, Mr. Hardwick, testified he measured this area the next morning following the accident and that the area from which the plaster fell was twelve inches by eighteen inches and the plaster was one-eighth of an inch thick. Mr. Hardwick further testified that he had been manager of the hotel since January 1949, and did not know whether the room had ever been re-plastered since it was built or not; that he inspected the entire hotel when he took over the management and made an inspection of room 216 every thirty days thereafter ; that there were no cracks in the plaster on the ceiling prior to July 21, 1949; that he had never seen any cracks in the plaster and none had been reported to him. It further appeared that the inspection made consisted of looking at the ceiling from the floor.

Appellee, Willis J.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.E.2d 501, 350 Ill. App. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccleod-v-nel-co-corp-illappct-1953.