Peterson v. Sahlin Co.

188 Ill. App. 622, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 585
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 7, 1914
DocketGen. No. 18,987
StatusPublished

This text of 188 Ill. App. 622 (Peterson v. Sahlin 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
Peterson v. Sahlin Co., 188 Ill. App. 622, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 585 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Sahlin Company appealed from a judgment of $2,000 against it and in favor of Edna Ellingsen in her suit for personal injuries.

Appellee had been employed by appellant for five years and when injured was working for it upon the fourth floor of its building at 1403 and 1409 on the south side of West Congress street, Chicago. The building fronts north one hundred feet and extends south to the alley, and a three story building adjoins it on the corner lot immediately east. Entrance to the building from Congress street is made through a hall in the northeast corner extending south thirty-four feet. The elevator shaft projects into the hall from the east wall, is sixteen feet south of the double door entrance, and faces west. The hall north of the elevator is thirteen feet and four inches wide and five feet nine inches where it passes west of the elevator. The west wall of the elevator is twenty inches thick, and the doors to it are hung about even with the east side of that brick wall, and those doors have glasses about three feet long and twenty-two inches wide, the door that is moved by the elevator man being about three feet wide. The inside walls of the elevator are said to be whitewashed, but of a ‘1 dark white color,” according to appellee’s evidence, by reason of having been soiled. The ceiling was about fourteen feet in height. There is a large room just west, separated from the hall by a partition, lathed and plastered for the first four feet up from the floor, and the rest of the partition is of opaque wire glass. The natural light that reached the elevator came from the north through the clear glass in the double doors and in the transom above them, the glass in each door being two feet four inches by five feet six and one-half inches, and that in the transom being six feet six inches by eighteen inches. Appellant claims that some light comes through the glass partition from the well-lighted room west of it. There was no artificial light in front of the elevator. There was one in the elevator for use on dark days, but it was out of commission on the day in question. Appellee was injured on a bright sunny day, July 13, 1910, about two minutes before 7:30 a. m., the time to begin work there, by falling into the well hole at the bottom of the elevator shaft and fracturing the fibula or small bone of her right leg, by reason of which she lost several months’ time and incurred $215 expenses for hospital fees and services of a physician in being healed. Appellee sometimes used the elevator there and sometimes the stairway to go to her working place. On the day of her injury she came into the building in a hurry having only two minutes to get to her work on time. A crowd of girls had preceded her to the front of the elevator, and as the regular elevator man was late that morning, at the urgent entreaty of those girls, the watchman had come down from the third floor with the elevator, and had taken a load of them to the fourth floor, and by oversight had left the elevator door on the first floor open just before appellee came. Appellee walked straight south down the hall to the elevator, turned to her left to enter it, and seeing the door was open, and thinking the elevator was in place, stepped into the shaft and fell to the bottom of the well hole.

A common-law declaration was originally filed charging negligence in appellant for its failure to furnish her a reasonably safe place in which to work, and reasonably safe means of reaching her work, charging failure to keep the elevator door closed and properly lighted. Appellee treats this count as a part of her declaration, although she asked no instructions applicable to it and it has little or no importance in this appeal.

Afterwards, what is called an amended declaration was filed containing three statutory counts, all charging that appellant controlled there a factory building or workshop and the said elevator, at which factory or workshop appellee was employed by it in its business conducted there, and on which elevator it had frequently carried her prior to her injury, while so at work. The first count thereof charges a violation of section 92, ch. 48, of Hurd’s St. 1911, p. 1129 (J. & A. 5389), or section 4 of what is commonly known as the Factory Act, by allowing the said elevator door to remain open at a time when it was not necessary that it be open in order that the elevator might be used.

The second count charges a violation of section 17 of the Factory Act (J. & A. Jf 5402) by neglecting to keep burning a proper light in front of said elevator door when it was dark there and on a work day, and when the influx of natural light there did not make artificial light unnecessary.

The third count of the amended declaration combined the first two statutory charges aforesaid and all three of said counts averred that appellee was injured hy reason of appellant’s violation of said statute, and while she was in the exercise of due care for her own safety.

It is contended by appellant that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the averment in the second count of the amended declaration, that it was dark at the elevator and that the influx of natural lig’ht there did not make artificial light unnecessary. Much of this argument is based upon appearances at and in the elevator as shown by a certain photograph in the record, and the evidence of nine of appellant’s witnesses who testified that the elevator and its surroundings were as well lighted and as plain to the view of any one standing in front of the elevator as they appear in the photograph. It must be admitted that all things in and about the elevator are very plain and easily seen from any point in the hall in front of the elevator if the witnesses were not mistaken about the correctness of the photograph, because the picture shows that every particle of the inside and outside of the elevator is so well lighted that they could easily be seen. It is claimed by appellee that the photograph was made from a negative taken by a flash light, but if this be true it should have been shown by evidence that was certainly obtainable, but which does not appear in the record. As the judgment will have to be reversed for reasons to be herein set forth, we do not desire to go into a full discussion of the merits of the case on the evidence. We think, however, that the question argued is one that should be submitted to the jury for settlement. Appellee testified on that point that there was no light in front of the elevator on the day of her injury, which was a work day there, and that there was no light in the elevator shaft, and that it was dark in front of the elevator and in the elevator shaft. One of the said nine witnesses for appellant, Freda Amies, on cross-examination, testified: “Yon had to walk np to the elevator before you found out the elevator wasn’t there. You couldn’t see it until you got there, not until you got in front of it. You have to go up to the door to see, if it isn’t there. You are in the hall when you are standing in front of the door and until you are standing in front of the wall you can’t see whether the elevator is open or not. You have got to get right up to it. You can’t see it until you get up to it.”

The elevator was above the first floor when appellee was injured. The picture in question shows the elevator in place on the first floor, and, therefore, does not present a photograph of the appearance of things there with the elevator removed to its situation when the injury occurred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 Ill. App. 622, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-sahlin-co-illappct-1914.