McCullough v. Illinois Steel Co.

148 Ill. App. 566, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 318
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 1909
DocketGen. No. 5,118
StatusPublished

This text of 148 Ill. App. 566 (McCullough v. Illinois Steel Co.) 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
McCullough v. Illinois Steel Co., 148 Ill. App. 566, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 318 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mb. Pbesiding Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on the case brought by James McCullough, appellee, against the Illinois Steel Company, appellant, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while employed in the company’s mixer mill at Joliet, Illinois, which is one of the departments of the converter.

The original declaration contained four counts, and an additional count was afterwards filed. The first count sets up the ownership of the plant and buildings, and charges the defendant with negligence in that it carelessly, negligently and wrongfully caused, permitted and allowed a large quantity of molten iron or other metal to escape or flow from a certain large vessel known as, to wit, a mixer, to and upon the plaintiff. The negligence alleged in the third count is that the defendant carelessly and negligently overloaded the mixer and poured an unusually large amount of metal into it from a ladle, which was more than the mixer could hold with safety. The fourth count alleges that the craneman operating the crane was an unskilled, incompetent and inexperienced servant, to wit; J. Juver, and that through his lack of skill he caused a large quantity of molten iron to pass from the ladle into the mixer, which was more than the mixer could safely contain. Bach count avers that the plaintiff was in the exercise of reasonable care, that he had no notice, knowledge or warning that the metal would escapé from the mixer, and that the injury did not result from an assumed risk or the negligence of a fellow-servant. The trial court instructed the jury to find the defendant not guilty as to the second and additional counts. The case was submitted to the jury on the remaining counts, and a verdict of guilty was returned assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $18,000. A motion for a new trial was overruled and a judgment entered on the verdict. The defendant brings the case to this court by appeal.

At the close of the evidence the appellant asked three instructions severally directing the jury to find the defendant not guilty as to the first, third, and fourth counts, and a fourth instruction to find the defendant not guilty. The court refused all these instructions, and the appellant assigns error upon the refusal of each of them. If a verdict can be sustained on the evidence upon any of the counts, then the refusal of the court to instruct the jury to find the defendant not guilty upon the particular counts and on the declaration as a whole, is harmless error, and it is unnecessary to discuss the application of the evidence to each count. Olson v. Kelly Coal Co., 236 Ill. 502; Swift & Co. v. Rutkowski, 182 Ill. 18; Consolidated Coal Co. of St. Louis v. Scheiber, 167 Ill. 539.

The evidence shows that in appellant’s steel mills at Joliet there are several departments, each in charge of different men. On the 18th day of April, 1907, the appellee was a machinist and was the assistant master mechanic of the appellant in its Bessemer department. George Burgess was the general master mechanic under whom the appellee and the other assistant master mechanics worked. The appellee had charge of the repair of the machinery in the Bessemer department, but had nothing to do with the operating of that department. Herbert W. Spencer was the general superintendent and John D. Wombacher was the assistant superintendent of the Bessemer department and had general charge of the operating of that department.

Iron is converted into steel in the Bessemer department of appellant’s mills. The iron is brought from the blast furnaces into what is termed the mixer mill, and there combined with iron from other furnaces preparatory to its conversion into steel. The mixer mill is a building constructed of iron or steel about 200 feet long east and west, about 70 feet in width and about 60 feet high. The main floor is of concrete and is about fifteen feet above the ground level. The east half of this building is occupied by two “mixers” which are large iron vessels shaped something ■ like a gravy boat about twenty-five feet in length, about twenty feet in width and about fifteen feet in depth. They will each hold about two hundred and fifty tons of molten metal. They are lined and covered on top with fire brick, the only openings being at the north end on the top where there is an aperture into which the metal is poured and at the south end where there is a nose or spout about four feet long and three feet wide. The mixers stand side by side about twenty feet apart and are known as the east and west mixers.

A steel platform called the weigher’s platform or mixer floor elevated about twelve feet above the main floor, extends along the south wall of the mill. The north edge of this mixer floor extends a few feet north of the south end of the mixers; V-shaped notches are cut into the floor of the platform to make room for the nose or spout of the mixers which when level are about four feet above the mixer floor. The mixers are placed upon rollers so that they can be tipped to the south to pour the molten contents into transfer ladles. The office of mixers is to permit the metal which is to be converted into steel in the adjoining building to be mixed so that its quality may be uniform.

On the north and south sides of the building near the top run tracks. Extending between these tracks are two bridges provided with wheels which rest upon the tracks so that the bridges move east and west on the tracks. Upon each bridge is a traveling hoist termed a trolley containing electric motors which run north and south on the bridges. From each of these trolleys are cables for the purpose of lowering and hoisting the ladles and other things. These elevated tracks with the bridges on them and the trolleys on the bridges give the trolleys a universal motion so that they can be moved in any direction. On the south end of each bridge is suspended what is known as the cage, from which the movement of the trolleys north and south and the bridges east and west and the operation of the cables is governed. The entire elevated machinery is moved and operated by electricity and constitutes what are called the cranes. A standard gauge railroad track runs through the building on the main floor passing the mixers at their north end. A similar railroad track comes into the building on the main floor from the east and runs under the south edge of the mixer floor and under the noses of the mixers, the west end being just west of the west mixer. The molten metal is brought to the mixers in ladles from the blast furnaces. These ladles are large cup-shaped vessels holding from 25,000 to 30,000 pounds of metal. They have a spout which is always on the south side of the ladles and are mounted on trucks; the ladles have trunnions on each side of them which always stand east and west. When it is desired to transfer metal to a mixer a ladle filled with the molten metal is brought into the mixer mill on the north track. The craneman in his cage which is suspended from the bridge some twelve or fifteen feet above the nose of the mixer, raises the ladle to its proper height from the truck with the electric crane by cables suspended from the trolleys which are adjusted to the trunnions .by hooks, and by means of an auxiliary cable attached to the north side of the ladle near the bottom the ladle is tipped and its contents are poured into the mixer through the aperture at its north end. When metal is to be transferred from a mixer a transfer ladle is brought into the mixer mill on a truck on the south track.

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Related

Illinois Steel Co. v. Schymanowski
44 N.E. 876 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Scheiber
47 N.E. 1052 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1897)
Swift & Co. v. Rutkowski
54 N.E. 1038 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Illinois Third Vein Coal Co. v. Cioni
74 N.E. 751 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1905)
Kennedy v. Swift & Co.
85 N.E. 287 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Olson v. Kelly Coal Co.
86 N.E. 88 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
148 Ill. App. 566, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccullough-v-illinois-steel-co-illappct-1909.