Nevin v. William Grace Co.

165 Ill. App. 259, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 166
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 2, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,829
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 Ill. App. 259 (Nevin v. William Grace 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
Nevin v. William Grace Co., 165 Ill. App. 259, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 166 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Superior Court of Cook county to reverse a judgment of nil capiat and for costs against the plaintiff.

The judgment was rendered on the verdict of a jury. Errors are assigned and argued in this court on various instructions given by the trial judge at the request of the defendant and on his action in denying the motion for a new trial, made on the ground that the verdict was against the ¡weight of the evidence.

The action was one for personal injuries to the plaintiff caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant corporation. The plaintiff was a structural iron worker. At the time of the accident he was in the employ of the defendant as one of a body or crew of like workers engaged in building for the defendant the steel structure of the present court house of Cook county. He was a riveter, and at the time of the accident was engaged in his work, sitting for that purpose on a scaffold constructed thus: From the floor girders of the eleventh floor were suspended by ropes two joists, called needle beams (four by sixes), each twenty-five feet long and running parallel to each other about ten feet apart. Three planks, each two inches thick, twelve inches wide and from twelve to fourteen feet long, were placed transversely across these needle beams at intervals of four or five feet. Transversely across these, and thus running in the same direction as the needle beams, were placed two other short planks. All these planks over the needle beams were laid loose and unfastened.

Besides the plaintiff there were four other men in the immediate riveting gang in which he was working', but only two were on the scaffold at the time. The one other than the plaintiff appears to have stepped from one of the upper short planks on to the plank on which Kevin was sitting, and it broke, precipitating both men in a fall which broke the plaintiff’s ankle. He sued the defendant corporation, alleging in the first count of his declaration that the defendant employed the plaintiff and was “possessed of and caused to be used” divers scaffolding work, and ordered and directed the plaintiff to work thereon; that the defendant knew that the scaffolding work was weak and unsafe, or should have known it, and that the plaintiff did not know the same. The second count makes substantially the same charges, averring that it was the duty of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work, but that in violation of said duty the defendant “supplied and furnished to the plaintiff and caused him to use the scaffolding along and above the tenth floor of said building, ’ ’ which was made of such unsafe, unfit and weak material that the plaintiff, not knowing (while the defendant did know) of said conditions, fell and was injured on account of the breaking of a board in said scaffolding.

To this declaration the defendant pleaded the general issue. The cause was submitted to a jury. After the case of the plaintiff was closed the defendant moved for a peremptory instruction in its favor. The motion was denied. The defendant offered no evidence: Five instructions were given to the jury at the request of plaintiff and twenty at the request of the defendant. Many of those tendered by the defendant and given are vigorously attacked by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s counsel during the arguments and after the opening argument for the plaintiff and the argument for the defendant, tendered one further instruction, which the court refused, marking it “Received too late.” Although this refusal is assigned for error, no argument is made on it, and it may be considered as waived.

The jury found a verdict of not guilty, and after a motion for a new trial had been made, argued and denied, the judgment which this writ of error seeks to reverse was rendered.

We do not think any good purpose would be served by taking up one by one the instructions that are complained of and criticising or approving them. The case is one which turns on broader principles than the mere phraseology of certain of the instructions which counsel for the plaintiff objects to.

The board which broke was defective for the purposes of a scaffold, in that it had a knot in it which the evidence would seem to show was hidden by a covering of mortar or cement which had hardened thereon.

Because of the undeniable general principle that a master must use reasonable care to furnish a reasonably safe place and reasonably safe appliances to his workmen, and, further, must use reasonable care in inspection from time to time to see that the place and appliances have not become unsafe, the plaintiff charges this unsound hoard in the scaffold to the negligence of the master, and claims damages for his injury. When to that the defendant rejoins that it had nothing more to do with the selection and inspection of the material which went into the scaffold than that it was selected by the very gang of its employes of which the plaintiff was one, from a pile of boards incidentally lying in the building under construction, and that therefore it should not be charged with the unsoundness of the particular hoard that broke, which it neither selected nor inspected, save through the plaintiff’s immediate fellow-servants, the plaintiff replies that under the law of Illinois, laid down in such cases as Leonard v. Kinnare, 174 Ill. 532, and Smith v. Schillinger, 225 Ill. 77, the duty of the master in selection and inspection cannot be so delegated as, by the “fellow-servant” or “common employment” doctrine, to relieve him from liability; that if it is delegated, the delegate who makes the selection and inspection becomes a vice principal, for whose acts or defaults the principal, whose primary and personal duty he has assumed, is liable. This also is undoubtedly the general rule. But to this there are exceptions.

It is not applicable where the preparation of the defective appliance by the fellow-servants and the selection of the material from which it is prepared are mere details of the work for which those servants are employed. In such a case the appliance is not furnished by the master, nor is the duty delegated. It is assumed spontaneously and voluntarily by the particular set or gang of workmen who, in the pursuance of their specialty in construction (as in the present case), or in other work, find it necessary to furnish themselves with the assistance of the temporary appliance.

Van Den Heuvel v. National Furnace Company, 84 Wis. 636, and the cases therein cited, illustrates this rule very well, and we deem it applicable to the case at bar.

Indeed there seems to be more than usual justification for the application of the fellow-servant rule where, as in this case, the furnishing and construction of the appliance seems to be made by the particular class or gang of workmen a peculiar privilege or safeguard of their employment.

The preference and determination of the structural iron workers to furnish their own scaffolds and “permit no one else to build them” appears in the evidence. It adds force at least to the further evidence that in the case at bar it was the voluntary choice for a detail of their work on the part of a particular gang of workmen co-operating on a job immediately at hand, rather than the supply of an appliance by the employer, which resulted in the defective scaffold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 Ill. App. 259, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevin-v-william-grace-co-illappct-1911.