Reed v. Manierre

124 Ill. App. 127, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 2
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 4, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,215
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 Ill. App. 127 (Reed v. Manierre) 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
Reed v. Manierre, 124 Ill. App. 127, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 2 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant sued appellee in case for damages alleged to have been caused by appellee’s negligence. The pleadings consist of the declaration and the general issue. The decíaration consists of three counts. In the first count it is averred, in substance, as follows:

January 7, 19t)l, William E. Manierre was the owner and in possession of Central Warehouse at 2-8 Eush street, Chicago; the western portion' was designated by United States Government as a bonded warehouse, where Manierre permitted importers to store for hire imported goods, where they remained until released from bond.

Plaintiff was assisting the weigher for the United States Government weighing goods there in hond. Within said building there was a freight elevator and shaft of large dimensions, extending from the basement through the first floor to the top of the building. Said elevator was equipped for hoisting or lowering goods, and sai’d shaft was enclosed, except that there was an opening on each floor at the north and south side thereof. It became necessary for Seed, in his employment, to enter and work on the first floor, and it was the duty of defendant to cause said elevator shaft and entrance to be in a safe condition, so that plaintiff, in his employment, and exercising care, could work near the shaft. Yet the defendant permitted said shaft to remain without any gate, etc., and in such a defective condition that plaintiff, in the exercise of due care, fell into said shaft, and received severe fractures, shocks, etc.

The negligence averred in the second count, is the permitting the first floor of the building to remain in a dark and dangerous condition; and that averred in the third count is the permitting the entrance, at the first floor, to an elevator shaft, to remain without any gate, door or other obstruction, and the permitting the said floor to be and remain dark. The jury found appellee not guilty and judgment was rendered on the verdict.

The argument of counsel for appellant is mainly directed to criticism of instructions 8 and 19 given by appellee’s request, and argument as to the duty which it is claimed appellee owed to appellant. We will first consider, as concisely as may be, the 'facts in evidence, testified to by appellant’s witnesses.

Appellee was the owner of Central Warehouse A, in tho city of Chicago, the western part of which, known as Central Warehouse B, was bonded to the United States by appellee, by a writing obligatory executed by appellee and his surety to the United States, May 25, 1899. One of the conditions of appellee’s bond was that he should comply, in all respects, with the requirements of the warehousing laws and regulations of the treasury department relating thereto. Central Warehouse B is 104 feet in length from north to south, and 42 feet in width from east to west, and is seven stories high. It is separated from the part of the building east of it, which the witnesses refer to as the free part, by a corrugated iron partition from the ground to the roof of the building. There was an entrance from the free part to the bonded part on the first floor, through the iron partition, and a few feet south of the northeast comer of the floor. The door there was a sliding door closed by a government lock. Entrance to this door was only through the office of the government storekeeper, which was just east of the door in the free part of the building. On each of all the other floors, in the bonded part of the building, there was a door in the iron partition, which was kept closed by a heavy iron bar across the door from jamb to jamb, so that the door could only be opened in the bonded side. Gleason, the government storekeeper and inspector of customs, opened the bonded part of the warehouse at eight o’clock in the morning and closed it at five o’clock in the afternoon. He testified that it was his duty to see that the entire bonded house was thoroughly closed each night, before going home, and to open it in the morning, when necessary. He further testified: “I was in charge of the warehouse, for the government, all the time. Upon my order to .receive, the warehouse employees handled the goods. Ho government official had anything to do with the handling of the goods. The employees of the warehouse did all the work. I looked over the inventory of the goods before they were piled. The foreman of the warehouse oversaw the piling of the goods, and an employee of the warehouse operated the elevator.” By “warehouse employees” is meant, as we understand, appellee’s employees. They, however, could only work under the supervision of the storekeeper. Section 973 of the regulations of the treasury department provides: “All labor shall be performed under the supervision of the storekeeper in charge,” and section 972 of the regulations provides: “All the doors and other fastenings of bonded warehouses must be secured by custom locks of different pattern from those of the proprietor.” There was a freight elevator .shaft in the bonded part next west of the iron partition and some distance south of the entrance to the first floor heretofore described. There were folding iron doors opening outward on each of the north and south sides of the shaft, which afforded entrance to the elevator platform when at that floor. In the" basement, on the south side of the elevator shaft, there was a door which was kept locked by the government, and to unlock it, one on a floor west of the partition would have to go down in the elevator. This door was locked on the day of the accident, and the key was in the possession of Gleason, the government storekeeper. •

At the time' of the accident there were piles of sacks of tea from 8 to 10 feet high on the first floor of the bonded part, along the walls of and in the centre of the room. The diagram (see p. 131) is substantially in accordance with the evidence. The place marked “Entrance” is the only entrance to the room from the free part of the building, and to gain it one must pass through the storekeeper’s office.

Article 969 of the treasury regulations is as follows: “An office for the accommodation of the owner or occupant may be allowed in warehouses, but such office must be separated by a partition from the rest of the premises, so that the owner shall have no access to the goods; except in presence of the officer, who must' be allowed such use of the office -as may be necessary for him in connection with his duties.” Gleason testified in respect to the piling of the teas: “I simply directed them to be put in the bonded part, and I had sole charge there. Eohody could go in, except when I opened the doors. None of the employees of the government could get in unless I let them. I received the goods,, as the government employee, and réceipted for them. The government storekeeper is the custodian of the teas received. It was my business to watch the door between the bonded and free parts, and see who went in and came out.” It ap-

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pears from the evidence that the teas, when received by the storekeeper, were piled by appellee’s employees, but when they were piled does not appear. After the tea was piled, it was weighed by the government employees, who weighed a certain percentage of it, as a criterion of the entire weight. The first floor was very dark, no natural light having access to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 Ill. App. 127, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-manierre-illappct-1906.