Odum v. Corn Products Refining Co.

173 Ill. App. 348, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 421
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 Ill. App. 348 (Odum v. Corn Products Refining 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
Odum v. Corn Products Refining Co., 173 Ill. App. 348, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 421 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McBride

delivered the opinion of the court.

The trial of this case resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of one thousand dollars, to reverse which judgment the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

On August 7, 1910, and prior thereto the appellant had been engaged in the business of extracting oil from the kernels of corn from which syrups are manufactured and in preparing the grain of corn, after the kernel had been extracted, for feed. Several buildings were used by the appellant in this work but more particularly a building known as the feed house, upon the first floor of which was located a mill, and the other building was known as the feed elevator and consisted of a six story brick building and was distant about one hundred fifty feet from the feed house. The two buildings are connected by an eighteen inch galvanized iron pipe extending from the outer wall of the lower floor of the feed building along and near the mill located thereon, thence to the upper floor of the elevator building at an angle of about forty-five degrees and there opens in to a bin. Near the mill are iron cylinders called dryers which are set at an angle and permit the feed, when in a proper state, to fall out, from whence it is" lifted by a perpendicular pipe and deposited in a cyclone on top of the feed house and immediately above the mill called the foose mill, where it falls by gravity into the mill; at intervals catcher boxes are placed for the purpose of allowing nails and pieces of metal to fall into the same, by gravity, as the feed is taken along through the pipe by the suction of a fan. The foose mill has two heavy iron disks, or grinders, about thirty-six inches in diameter fastened to shafting so that they revolve in opposite directions, the feed going in at the center and being thrown out at the bottom, and are enclosed in a cast iron frame to which is attached a lever used to separate the disks; after the feed has been taken by the fan through the pipe containing the catcher box and up a perpendicular pipe and across to the cyclone, which is some distance immediately above the foose mill, it is allowed to fall by gravity through an opening in the bottom of the cyclone on to the top of a German magnet designed to prevent particles of iron or steel from going into the grinders of the mill, and the feed when ground falls by gravity into an eighteen inch galvanized iron pipe heretofore described and called the intake pipe, this pipe is screened on the outside and has an opening on the inside of the wall which is also screened, and in fair weather the outside is used for the intake of air and in bad weather the inside is used. The feed is taken through this blow pipe by the use of the fan to the top of the elevator building where it is deposited in a hopper and there sacked for use.

The deceased, Samuel Batson, as it appears from the evidence had nothing to do with the mill or its operation but he was the foreman and in charge of the elevator and had five or six men under his direction and supervision, caring for the elevator and sacldng the feed. The evidence discloses that there was more or less dust connected with the manufacture of this feed stuff, and of the sacking thereof, and that particles of dust collected in the upper stories of the elevator and from this collection of dust it appears that the dust explosion occurred about four o’clock in the afternoon of August 7th, tearing away the upper story and cyclone of the elevator building and causing the brick to fall upon the appellee’s intestate and injured him, from which injury he afterwards died.

The declaration in this ease consisted of four counts but at the close of plaintiff’s testimony the first, second and third counts were withdrawn and the case went to the jury upon the fourth count.

The fourth count of the declaration, after setting out the business in which appellant was engaged, and describing the elevator building and feed house, the machinery and the purposes thereof, also that the deceased Samuel Batson was foreman in charge of the elevator building, and that the feed house, food products, machinery and appliances connected therewith were in the exclusive control and management of the defendant and its servants engaged in said feed house, with which the deceased had no connection; it then avers that the defendant so negligently and carelessly operated, handled, managed and controlled said feed house, mill, machinery, connections and appurtenances, that by and through such negligence and carelessness a fire occurred in said feed house and reached the upper floor of the elevator building through the cyclone pipe which connected said elevator building in said feed house as aforesaid, by means whereof an explosion occurred in said elevator building; by means whereof the deceased, who was then and there in the employ of the defendant, in and about the elevator building as aforesaid, while in the exercise of due care and without notice or means of knowledge of danger to him and while so situated in said feed house, food stuff, machinery and appliances, was severely burned, bruised, wounded and injured from the flames of said explosion and the bricks that were hurled from the top of the elevator building by said explosion, from which injuries he afterwards died.

The first complaint made by counsel for appellant is, that the court erred in refusing to grant appellant’s motion to exclude the widow and two minor children of the deceased from the court room during the trial of the case, and later a motion to exclude the children. It is argued that the presence of the widow and children would have a tendency to create sympathy upon the part of the jury that would induce the jury to find a verdict for appellee from sympathy rather than from the evidence produced in the case. It may be true that the presence of the widow and these children would tend to énlist the sympathy of the jury in their behalf, but the widow and children are interested parties in the result of this suit; whatever judgment is obtained belongs to them and we know of no law that prevents interested persons from being present at the hearing of their case, even though their unfortunate condition was such as to enlist the sympathy of the jury, and we have not been referred by counsel to any case that, as we think, announces a different principle. The case of Jones & Adams Co. v. George, 227 Ill. 70, was an action brought by the plaintiff himself for injuries that he had received, and he was there allowed to prove that he was a married man and had three children, which could have nothing to do with the question as the court said the damages allowed were only compensatory for the injury received. And the other case referred to C. P. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Woolridge, 174 Ill. 334, was where evidence had been admitted that one of the children of the deceased was a cripple, which was held to be error as the court said the damages recoverable could only be the loss to the estate. We think these authorities and others cited are not applicable to the facts in this case for the reasons above stated.

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Bluebook (online)
173 Ill. App. 348, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odum-v-corn-products-refining-co-illappct-1912.