Pozlep v. Crane Co.

161 Ill. App. 422, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 763
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 5, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,715
StatusPublished

This text of 161 Ill. App. 422 (Pozlep v. Crane 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
Pozlep v. Crane Co., 161 Ill. App. 422, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 763 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action was brought by John Pozlep, defendant in error, against the Crane Company, plaintiff in error, in the Superior Court to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him on November 15, 1906, while he was in the employ of the Crane Company. The original declaration consisted of one count, and was filed on July 1, 1907. In April, 1908, two additional counts were filed. On the trial, the court sustained motions of the defendant below to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover under either the original declaration or the second additional count.

The first additional count alleges that the defendant in error (hereinafter called the plaintiff) was in the employ of the defendant, and in the course of his employment, it was his duty to wheel scrap iron in a wheelbarrow from a point in the defendant’s plant over and upon planks or a passageway which extended over the roofs of certain sheds, to certain bins, where the plaintiff was to dump the scrap iron; that the defendant negligently permitted the planks which were lying upon the roof of a shed or bin to remain in a loose and unfastened condition and furnished no support underneath said roof, and negligently removed and took away from underneath said roof, the„ supports which prior to the day on which the plaintiff was injured, had been underneath the said roof, so that said planks and said roof were insufficiently supported and unfit to hold the load which the plaintiff was then and there wheeling oyer the same, and was shaky and teetering, which said condition of the roof was not known to the plaintiff, and that while the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care for his own safety, by reason of the shaking and teetering of said planks and roof, he was thrown off from the same into a certain hole in said roof directly adjacent to and adjoining said planks, whereby he was severely injured.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant operated a pipe mill at Rockwell and Fifteenth streets, in the city of Chicago, and that certain railroad tracks ran north and south adjoining the eastern boundary of the property. The sheds extended north and south, and were about sixteen feet west of and parallel with the railroad tracks. The roof of each shed was sixteen feet from the gable or ridge to the eaves, and had a slight pitch, being two feet higher at the ridge than at the eaves. The space between the easterly shed and the railroad tracks was divided off into bins into which scrap iron was dumped. There were five of these bins and they were made by nailing two-inch planks to posts which were set sixteen feet east of the east side of the easterly shed. 'The easterly side of the shed in this way constituted the west end of the bin. The width of the bins differed to some extent. A plank passageway extended from a platform along the north side of the main pipe mill to the roof of the west shed. From that place where planks rested on the roof the passageway extended over the roofs of the two sheds in a northeasterly direction. Near the eastern edge of the east shed, two three-inch planks extended out upon the bins. These planks were the end of the passageway, and from them wheelbarrow loads of scrap iron, which was wheeled out from the pipe mill and over and along the passageway above described, were .emptied into the bins below. -These planks rested on the roof from three to five feet from the eaves, and extended out diagonally over the bins and rested on one of the partitions running .east and west that divided the space between the east shed and the railroad tracks into bins. They also rested on a support that was built up at the point where the planks extended over the eaves and they were nailed at each of these three points. Where the planks rested on the roof two boards were placed to lessen the jar when the wheelbarrows were wheeled from the roof onto the planks.

It was a part of the duty of the plaintiff and other employes to gather up scrap iron that accumulated in the pipe mill, and to wheel the same in wheelbarrows from the pipe mill over the passageway above described and empty the same in the bins. The plaintiff had been engaged in this work for a period of from four to six months prior to the date on which he was injured, and had occasion to go over the passageway in question a number of times every day.

The accident occurred about nine-thirty o’clock in the morning. Plaintiff claimed that the last time he had been over the passageway prior to his injury was about eleven o’clock on the day previous, and that the passageway was solid and firm on all occasions when he had been over it prior to the day he was injured, but that at the time of the injury it was insecure, and was teetering and shaky. The plaintiff’s testimony is that after he was on the planks and was about to empty his load of scrap iron into one of the bins he was thrown to the ground in an open space where there was no roof near the passageway or planks, because of the shaking and teetering condition of the roof, and thereby injured.

•The plaintiff and his witnesses claimed that large quantities of coal had been stored in the east shed under that part of the roof over, which the passageway extended, and that prior to the time the plaintiff was injured and after eleven o ’clock of the day before, this coal which it was alleged formed a support to the roof, was removed. The evidence, however, on behalf of the defendant, shows that the shed in question had been constructed about a year before the accident. The manner of the construction, the dimensions of the uprights, stringers and rafters, were all proven. The plaintiff himself testified that the roof was solid prior to the time he was injured; “that nothing broke at the time I fell but the planks went loose and tipped me right over and threw me into the hole. When the roof was shaking and the planks went up and down, I fell.”

Nine witnesses for the defendant testified that it was solid before the accident and that it was also just as solid after the accident. One workman who saw the accident immediately walked over the planks from which the plaintiff fell and he testified that they were solid and firm. Another workman had just passed over the same planks and passageway and in returning, after dumping his load, he passed the plaintiff just as the plaintiff was coming out wheeling the load with which he fell. This workman as well as several others testified that the roof over which the passageway extended was firm immediately after Pozlep came over it; that there was no change of any kind in the supports thereto; that the roof was as solid immediately after the accident as it had been before, and that the defendant continued to. use the passageway without any change as to the supports to the roof, for several months after the plaintiff’s injury.

Numerous errors are assigned on the record and urged in argument as grounds for a reversal of the judgment. We do not deem it necessary to discuss or refer to the grounds of reversal based upon such alleged errors for the reason that in our opinion the evidence on the part of the plaintiff is unbelievable, and affords no basis for the recovery which was had in this case in view of all the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 Ill. App. 422, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pozlep-v-crane-co-illappct-1911.