O'Donnell v. Armour Curled Hair Works

111 Ill. App. 516, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 298
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 21, 1903
DocketGen. No. 10,934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 Ill. App. 516 (O'Donnell v. Armour Curled Hair Works) 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
O'Donnell v. Armour Curled Hair Works, 111 Ill. App. 516, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 298 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error, as administrator of the estate of Max Schmidt, deceased, sued defendants in error in case for alleged negligence causing the death of his intestate. The jury found the defendants not guilty and judgment was rendered against the plaintiff, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

Defendants were the owners of a brick building at the southeast corner of Thirty-first and Benton streets, in the city of Chicago, about five stories in height, which was used, as appears from the record, for the manufacturing and pressing of curled hair and other materials. The deceased had been in the employ of the defendants about five months, his place of work being at the southwest corner of the third floor of the building. The third floor was 216J feet long from east to west and 108J feet in width from north to south. There were two stairways in the building similarly constructed, one at the northwest and the other at the southeast corner of the building. The stairs were from five to eight feet in width, and were enclosed in shafts about ten feet wide. On each floor there were iron doors leading to the floor from the stairway shafts. There were four fire escapes, two in the north and two in the south wall of the building, which extended from the top of the building to the ground, with balconies on each floor. A fire happened in the building, commencing at the southeast corner thereof, between 12:30 and 2 o’clock in the daytime, March 27,1899. Plaintiff’s intestate was on the third floor when the fire broke out. Subsequently, his body was found at the bottom of the shaft of the northwest stairway. The declaration consists of three counts. The negligence averred in the different counts is as follows : first count, “And the defendant then and there well knowing the dangerous character of- said btiilding and the inflammability thereof and the inflammability and likelihood of the said curled hair and other materials therein to easily ignite and rapidly burn, carelessly, negligently, wrongfully and- improperly permitted the means of egress and escape from said room or compartment to be in an unreasonable and unreasonably unsafe condition in case of fire, and the doors and windows of the said room or compartment and the passageways therefrom to be obstructed and blocked up and rendered inaccessible by placing or permitting to be placed and remain divers large quantities, of curled hair and other materials about and against and before the said windows, doorways and passageways and other means of egress from said room or compartment in such manner as to hinder or prevent egress or escape therefrom,” etc.; second count: “Defendants well knowing the dangerous character of said building and the inflammability thereof and the inflammability and likelihood of the said curled hair and other materials therein to easily ignite and rapidly burn, carelessly, negligently, wrongfully and improperly permitted the means of egress and escape from said room’or compartment to be in an unreasonable and unreasonably unsafe condition in case of fire and the doors and windows of the said room or compartment and the passageways therefrom to be obstructed and blocked up and rendered inaccessible by placing or permitting to be placed and remain divers large quantities of curled hair and other materials about and against and before the said windows, doorways and passageways and other means of egress from said room or compartment in such manner as to hinder or prevent egress or escape therefrom,” etc. The third count sets out the following ordinance of the city of Chicago, and avers as follows : “ ft shall be unlawful, under any circumstances, to close up or obstruct, during the occupation for business purposes, of any building, the stairs or fire escapes or the approaches leading there, and no change in the position or construction of either shall be made, unless the permission so to do of the building department first shall have been obtained.” “And the plaintiff avers that the said Armour Curled Hair Works, and the said Phillip D. Armour and Jonathan O. Armour, and Phillip D. Armour, Jr., doing business as Armour & Co., negligently, carelessly and wrongfully failed to comply with the provisions of said ordinance in that they negligently and wrongfully permitted the said stairs and fire escapes in and about said building and the approaches leading thereto, while said building was being occupied for the business purposes aforesaid, to be and remain closed up and obstructed, and a fire then and there suddenly broke out, and by means of the premises,” etc.

We understand counsel for plaintiff to rely for reversal on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and that the court erred in refusing to give certain instructions asked by the plaintiff, and in giving certain instructions asked by the defendants. Counsel for plaintiff do not refer to the evidence in detail, or specifically, saying :

“ To make any attempt to recapitulate or set out. in this brief, the evidence, would virtually amount to an insertion of nearly all of the abstract.”

We appreciate the difficulty thus suggested by counsel, and will refer to the evidence as briefly as may be. Plaintiff called only four witnesses as to the condition and surroundings of the third floor before and at the time the fire was discovered. The place of work of two of these witnesses was on the second floor of the building, one on the fifth floor, and one on the third floor. They testified, generally, to the presence of material such as wool, cotton and hair, on the floor, some in bales and some in bins; but no one of them testified that there was on the floor any obstruction sufficient to prevent one exercising ordinary care from ■ escaping from the floor after the fire was discovered, by the means of escape provided by the defendants, namely, the fire escapes and stairways. Mor could any one of them have truly so testified, in view of the uncontrovertible fact that of thirty persons employed on the third floor at the time of the fire, twenty-eight escaped safely.

Ada Flanagan, whose brother worked next to the deceased on the third floor, called by plaintiff, testified that she worked on the second floor; that, between ' 12:30 and 1:00 o’clock, she went up to the third floor by the northwest stairway; that' the machine at which her brother worked was about fifty feet south from the stairway, and that she could walk from the stairway straight down to where her brother was working.

Eddie Stiles, the only one of plaintiff’s witnesses' whose place of work was on the third floor, while he was evidently inclined to support the plaintiff’s case as far as he could, testified that after he discovered the fire in the southeast corner, he went down to the second floor, assisted some 'yoiing fellows in tying hose up to the third floor, stood'on the third floor awhile, and then went down by the northwest stairway and onto the street.

The defendants called seven witnesses, all of whom, except-one, were employed on the third floor of the building, at the time of the fire, and the one who was not so employed testified that it was his duty to go to the third floor twice each day to see every one there and take his time; to take care of accidents, and to see if there was anything out of order, and that he was on that floor about ten o’clock in the morning of the day of the fire. This witness, Lauerman, testified, among other things, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ill. App. 516, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odonnell-v-armour-curled-hair-works-illappct-1903.