Quincy Gas & Electric Co. v. O'Donnell

123 Ill. App. 456, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 783
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 24, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 123 Ill. App. 456 (Quincy Gas & Electric Co. v. O'Donnell) 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
Quincy Gas & Electric Co. v. O'Donnell, 123 Ill. App. 456, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 783 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by appellee against appellants to recover damages for injuries received by him while in the employ of appellants. A trial in the Circuit Court resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $1,500, upon which, motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment having been denied, judgment was entered. To reverse said judgment this appeal is taken.

The declaration to which the general issue was pleaded contains six counts. Appellee bases his right to recover upon the fourth, fifth and sixth counts.

The fourth count alleges that defendants were lawfully excavating a trench in one of the public streets of the city of Quincy, and had employed the Menke Company to blast deposits of rock which were encountered by the defendants in making such trench; that the Menke Company had no right either by virtue of its charter, or by permission from the city, to excavate or blast in the streets of the city of Quincy, but were exercising, with the assent of the appellants, one of the charter powers and privileges of appellants; that the appellee was a servant of said appellants, and while in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety was injured by and through the carelessness of the servants of the Menke Company in overcharging with dynamite the holes drilled in the rock to be blasted.

The fifth count is substantially the same as the fourth in all its features, except as to the negligence therein charged. It charges, in substance, that the servants of the Menke Company negligently and carelessly failed carefully and properly to cover said holes or said blast with logs, etc., but negligently caused said explosive substance to be exploded without carefully and properly covering said holes or blast, etc.

The sixth count charges the appellants with negligence in failing to give appellee sufficient warning of the blast as to enable him to reach a place of safety before the explosion took place.

At the close of all the evidence a motion to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendants was interposed and overruled.

The record discloses substantially the following facts: In September and October, 1903, appellants were engaged in business in Quincy, Illinois, under the same management. They were, at that time, engaged in laying steam ■ heat pipes upon and along Jersey street from the foot of Front street east towards Third street. When the trench reached a point on Jersey street just east of Front street limestone was encountered, which arose gradually from Front street, and appellants procured from the Menke Stone Company a steam drill and a crew to do the drilling and blasting necessary to remove the same. On the day of the accident, appellee was at work with a hand drill, in the wake of the steam drill, widening the ditch when necessary, and blasting such stone as had not been already dislodged by the steam drill. At the time the accident occurred, the trench had been cleared to a point about 250 feet east of Front street, and appellee was at work in the trench about thirty feet west of the steam drill.

The blast which occasioned the injury to appellee consisted of nine or ten holes, from four and a half to five feet deep, ranged in rows of three each across the trench, with the center hole somewhat further west than the others; the holes nearest the open face of the stone on the west being loaded with three-quarters of a pound of dynamite and the holes further east with from a pound and a quarter to a pound and a half each. The holes nearest the west face of the rock were about a foot to a foot and a half from the edge thereof at the top and from two to three feet at the bottom, the breast of the stone sloping to the west as it neared the bottom of the trench. About two feet oast of these holes was a second row and about two feet east of the second row was a third, all of which were wired and the charge of dynamite therein tired from an electric battery, standing to the southeast of the blast and out of line with the trench. Before the charges were fired sand was poured into these holes above the dynamite and the entire upper surface of the rock covered with railroad ties. One timber was placed near the west end of the rock to be blasted and at right angles to the line of the trench. Besting upon this at the west end and upon a rock ledge to the east, railroad ties were placed parallel with the line of the ditch and completely covering the upper face of the stone, the west face, fronting the open ditch, being left without protection.

When the blast was discharged a large quantity of broken fragments of stone was thrown violently down the hill to the west and somewhat to the north'of the ditch, coming mostly from the upper part of the rock blasted, one piece of considerable size striking the plaintiff in the small of the back and injuring one of his kidneys seriously. Another piece struck one Boyal Clark, who was standing just east of appellee, and threw him to the ground. Several pieces were thrown across Front street, much further than, in any previous blast made in this trench. Before the blast was made the west face of the rock appeared solid, but when the debris was cleared away a perpendicular seam was disclosed in the rock, about a foot below the upper surface, running well toward the west face and from thence eastward clear across the blast and cutting off the stone to the north from the block or section being blasted.

The evidence shows that it is the tendency of dynamite to go downward and then to seek the weakest point; but that it usually explodes upward when its downward course is checked, and if a seam occasions weakness on one side of the hole it seeks an outlet in that direction.

Appellants contend that the judgment should be reversed for the reason that the evidence is insufficient to establish the negligence charged in either count of the declaration.

The fourth count avers that appellants “ carelessly and negligently loaded said holes with an overcharge of dynamite, and then and there exploded the same, while overcharged.” In support of said count, appellee testified that the blast in question threw fragments of stone much further than had previous blasts, and that an unusually loud report followed the explosion. This was substantially all the evidence tending to support the count in question. Mo further proof was introduced which tended to show that the amount of dynamite inserted in each hole was excessive under ordinary circumstances. In fact, appellee in his testimony admitted that had he had charge of the holes he would have used the same quantity of dynamite that was in fact used.

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123 Ill. App. 456, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quincy-gas-electric-co-v-odonnell-illappct-1905.