McIntyre v. State

39 Ill. Ct. Cl. 78, 1987 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 1987
DocketNo. 82-CC-2210
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Ill. Ct. Cl. 78 (McIntyre v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntyre v. State, 39 Ill. Ct. Cl. 78, 1987 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1987).

Opinion

Raucci, J.

This is a claim brought by Claimant, Walter McIntyre, for personal injuries sustained by him on October 30, 1981, while he was a resident at Stateville Correctional Center. On the date in question, an electronic gate closed on Claimant’s right arm severely injuring his right biceps.

Claimant worked in the general kitchen as a utility man. At about 4:00 p.m. on the day in question, he was assigned to take a cart containing coffee and cookies to A and B dining rooms. He delivered what he had to deliver to A dining room and was on his way to B dining room when a guard snatched a package of cookies off the cart as Claimant and his cart passed in front of D house gate.

The gate to D house is an electronically operated gate constructed out of bars. Six feet of the gate is stationary and another six feet of the gate slides on a track past the stationary part of the gate. The gate is operated by employees in a control room watching cameras and taking voice commands from officers via walkie-talkie radios.

When the guard took the cookies the gate was open and he walked through the gate. Whoever was operating the gate closed it after the guard went through.

Claimant called after the guard to return whatever he had taken from the wagon.

“Q. What were you calling him for?

A. To get whatever he took off the wagon back.

Q. Why was it important to get those back?

A. When I leave the kitchen and B called for us to bring food or coffee to the dining, when I left the kitchen if I don’t show up to the dining room with whatever I left the kitchen with, I get disciplinary report wrote up on me, because inmates have been known to steal stuff out of the kitchen.

I would have been accused of it, written up with a disciplinary report written up on me, and possibly put in segregation or C grade or whatever, and I was trying to avoid a ticket which was a disciplinary report.

Q. So, you said you called this guard.

How did you call him and by what means?

A. I called the officer.
Q. Did you know him by name?
A. No.
Q. What else did you do to attract his attention?

A. He stopped when he got halfway down the tunnel, because after you go through the gate, there is a tunnel before you get to C house which is about a block or so long.

Got halfway down the tunnel and asked me what I wanted. I asked him to bring back what he took off the wagon, and he said I don’t have nothing.

I pointed to what he had in his hand.
Q. Which arm did you use to point?
A. Right arm.
Q. Where was your arm when you started pointing to what he had?

A. When I first pointed, he acted as if he couldn’t see me which he could from as far as I could see, but I stick my hands through the bars and pointed directly at what he had, and that is when whoever was operating the gate . . . .” (Tr. 8-10)

In other words, to better use his right hand to point at the object in the officer’s hand, Claimant thrust his right arm through the stationary part of the gate. At that point an employee in the control room opened the gate and crushed Claimant’s right arm in the area of his biceps.

The gate opened when it did because Officer Cook, by radio, called the control office to open the gate, without noticing that Claimant had his arm through the stationary portion.

First we will consider the report filed by Officer Cook:

“I Officer Cook was going into D-House tunnel, Resident McIntyre was standing at the gate with his arm through the bars. Control center opened the gate and Resident McIntyre’s arm smashed between the two gates.

I signalled the control center to release Resident McIntyre’s arm.” (Resp. Ex. 1)

Next we will consider his testimony:

“Q. When you approached the D gate at this particular time, was the gate open or closed?

A. It was closed.
Q. And where was Resident McIntyre with regard to the gate?
A. He was standing on the stationary side of it.
Q. What was he doing there?
A. Talking.
Q. Who was he talking to?

A. I don’t know who he was talking to. He was talking to someone standing in the tunnel.

Q. Was that someone in the tunnel an officer or an inmate?
A. I don’t know. I’m not sure.
Q. Then what happened?

A. Then I called over the radio to have them open the gate so I could go inside the tunnel.

Q. And after you called the radio, did the gate begin to open?
A. Yes.

A. Then I noticed his arm was through the gate, and it smashed, and so I could tell them to close it____” (Tr. 51-52)

When Officer Cook realized that Claimant’s arm was caught in the gate, he began to wave his arm in front of the camera to get the attention of the operator in the control room. But waving to attract the attention of the operator was futile, because apparently no one was watching the screen. He had to call the operator over his radio in order to get the control room’s attention to close the gate and release Claimant’s arm. The fact that the gate had not opened far enough to permit anyone to go through but, in fact, wedged Claimant’s arm between it and the stationary bars escaped the attention of those in the control room. A minute elapsed before an operator in the control room pressed a button to close the gate.

“Q. Between the time Mr. McIntyre’s arm was first caught in the gate and the time you called the control center telling them to close the gate releasing Mr. McIntyre’s arm approximately how much time passed, if you can recall?

A. About a minute.” (Tr. 53; also see Tr. 28).

On cross-examination Officer Cook elaborated further:

“BY MR. AIOSSA

Q. Officer Cook, drawing your attention back to the statement exhibit when you read it, you said McIntyre’s arm was smashed between the gate. The last sentence is actually I signalled the control center to close the gate to release his arm?

A. I was waving in front of the camera.
Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Ill. Ct. Cl. 78, 1987 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-v-state-ilclaimsct-1987.