Mueller v. Elm Park Hotel Co.

75 N.E.2d 814, 398 Ill. 60, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 457
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1947
DocketNo. 29649. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 75 N.E.2d 814 (Mueller v. Elm Park Hotel 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
Mueller v. Elm Park Hotel Co., 75 N.E.2d 814, 398 Ill. 60, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 457 (Ill. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case comes here on leave to appeal granted to review the judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District.

The case was tried in the superior court of Cook County, and á verdict was returned for the sum of $25,000 against the hotel company in favor of appellant, who was the plaintiff in the case. Motions for a directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict were denied. Originally there were three defendants to the cause. At the close of all the evidence the case was dismissed as to to a defendant building corporation. By its verdict the jury found in favor of the American Fork & Hoe Company, leaving the hotel company as the sole defendant. On motion for a new trial, the court required a remittitur of $7500 and entered judgment on the verdict of the jury for $17,500. The defendant hotel company appealed and the Appellate Court reversed the judgment of the trial court without remanding the cause, on the ground that the burden was on the appellant to prove that she and her employer were not under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. This court reviewed that judgment and, because there was no evidence in the record which would make the parties subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, reversed the judgment of the Appellate Court and remanded the cause with directions to consider the other errors assigned in that court. (391 Ill. 391.) On such remanding order the Appellate Court again reversed the judgment of the trial court.

The facts have been fully stated in both the opinions of the Appellate Court and this court. The appellee, the Elm Park Hotel Company, was managing and operating a hotel in the city of Chicago. Appellant, Ruth Will Mueller, was employed as a waitress in the coffee shop located in the hotel and leased and operated by one Julia Orsulak. She lived in the hotel and received food as part payment for her services.

On the morning of May 5, 1941, one Starlin, the maintenance man for the hotel, on' orders from the manager started to make some repairs on the floor in thé coffee shop and the front door of the restaurant was closed to patrons. By directions from the manager, Starlin 'purchased from a nearby hardware store a hatchet and a pinch bar to be used in repairing the floor, The appellant and her employer were sitting at a table some eight or ten feet distant from the place where Starlin was working. While so engaged Starlin used the hatchet as a cutting tool, holding it. in his left hand and pounding it with a hammer in his right. During the course of the work a piece of steel broke off the head of the hatchet, and, in flying through the air, struck the appellant in the right ankle, where it became imbedded in her instep. A physician was called, the wound treated and the piece of steel extracted. The wound apparently healed, but a few days afterwards the appellant’s heel began to throb and she was sent to a hospital for further attention. She remained in the Cook county hospital for over one year. Her leg became progressively worse and finally developed a permanent disability which her own physician diagnosed as osteomyelitis. The hotel company disputes the appellant’s theory and also insists the appellant failed to prove any causal connection between the disabilities complained of and the alleged injury. At the time.of the trial she was on crutches, and she had an open abscess or ulcer on the side of the injured foot.

It is contended by appellant that there is evidence in the record which tends to prove two charges in her complaint of (1) negligent and improper use of the hatchet and (2) negligence in failing to provide proper safeguards during the course of the work performed by Starlin.

The Appellate Court held that the appellant by her attorneys had, during the trial, abandoned the theory that the use of the hatchet in itself was improper, and further held that the sole question to determine was whether it was negligent in law for the servant of the hotel company to do the work prescribed without providing safeguards which would have prevented the injury to appellant. After reviewing the evidence, that court held as a matter of law that the defendant hotel company was not negligent in doing the repair work at the time and in the way it was done. The court, therefore, held that the instruction requested by the defendant for a verdict in its favor at the close of all the evidence should have been granted, and its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been allowed.

This court has many times announced that in considering motions of this character the evidence must be considered in its aspects most favorable to the party adverse to the motion. (Blumb v. Getz, 366 Ill. 273.) Where the effect of the Appellate Court’s holding is that there is not evidence sufficient, when considered alone, to sustain the charges in the complaint, it becomes the duty of this court to examine the record to determine whether there is any evidence, which, taken with its intendments most favorable to the plaintiffs, tends to prove the charge of the complaint. Humbert v. Lowden, 385 Ill. 437.

There is evidence in the record introduced for the purpose of showing negligent and improper use of the hatchet in the repair of the floor. Starlin testified that a chisel and not a hatchet was the proper tool to use for the performance of the work in which he was engaged. An expert on metal inspection testified that the hatchet head could have chipped off due to the fact that it was hit on the edge of the head with a steel hammer. A witness for the manufacturer of the hatchet, which was then a defendant in the cause, testified that the hatchet was not fabricated for the purpose of applying metal for cutting purposes. The American Fork & Hoe Company, makers of the hatchet, was still one of the defendants in the case during the final argument. A strenuous attempt was made by counsel for appellant to obtain a verdict holding both defendants liable, and in his closing remarks to the jury, he emphasized the liability of the hatchet company and indicated that striking the hatchet with a hammer was not an improper use of such tool. This argument was presented in answer to the contention of the American Fork- & Hoe Company that the hatchet had been improperly used by Starlin at the time appellant was injured. However, we do not consider the remarks as absolutely binding upon the appellant or an abandonment of the charge of improper use of the hatchet, because of the confusion over defendants and their several liabilities arising upon the argument. The Appellate Court erred in not considering all of the evidence submitted in the record and particularly the testimony as to the charge of improper use of the hatchet.

The record also discloses that there were no safeguards provided in the vicinity of where the work was being done which would prevent injury to the appellant. The Appellate Court held as a matter of law that the hotel company was not negligent in doing the repair work at the time and in the manner it was done; that in the exercise of ordinary care the servant of the hotel company making the repairs could not have anticipated the accident by which appellant was injured or any similar accident tó her.

We believe the finding of the Appellate Court is too broad.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E.2d 814, 398 Ill. 60, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mueller-v-elm-park-hotel-co-ill-1947.