Roloff v. Luer Bros. Packing & Ice

263 Ill. 152
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 Ill. 152 (Roloff v. Luer Bros. Packing & Ice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roloff v. Luer Bros. Packing & Ice, 263 Ill. 152 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant in error, Henrietta Roloff, administratrix of the estate of William J. Roloff, deceased, brought an action on the case in the circuit court of Madison county against the Luer Brothers Packing and Ice Company, the plaintiff in error, to recover for the death of William J. Roloff, which, it was alleged, was occasioned by the negligence of plaintiff in error. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for $6247.22 in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered upon this verdict. Plaintiff in error prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Fourth District, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed. A writ of certiorari was thereafter granted by this court, and the record, has been brought here for review.

The declaration in the case consisted of four counts, each of which' alleged that on May 7, 1908, the plaintiff in error was possessed of and operating a packing plant in the city of Alton, and that William J. Roloff, the deceased, was then in the employ of plaintiff in error, engaged in the business of whitewashing and painting in the various rooms of said plant; that said plant contained a large amount of machinery, including a certain Ball ice machine, which was located in the engine room of the plant; that in the performance of his duties Roloff was required to use a scaffold and to move the timbers and planks thereof from place to place and from room to room as the work progressed; that on the day above mentioned, while Roloff, in the exercise of due care for his own safety, was attempting to move the planks and timbers of the scaffold from one part of the' plant to another part he fell upon and was thrown under the crank-shaft of the Ball ice machine and was instantly killed. The negligence charged in the first count was, that the plaintiff in error failed to place a guard or railing or other like appliance around the crankshaft; that charged in the second count was, that plaintiff in error failed to furnish proper and sufficient light in the engine room; that charged in the third count was, that plaintiff in error failed to furnish sufficient help to assist Roloff in moving the planks and timbers of the scaffold from room to room; and that charged in the fourth count was, that plaintiff in error negligently ordered and directed Roloff to carry the planks and timbers along a narrow passageway, which brought him into- dangerous proximity to the ice machine, which was in rapid motion. To this declaration the general issue was interposed and the cause proceeded to trial upon these pleadings.

The evidence shows that plaintiff in error, on the day mentioned in the declaration, was engaged in operating a packing and ice manufacturing plant in the city of Alton, and that some time prior to that date Roloff had been employed by plaintiff in error to paint and whitewash the walls and ceilings of the various rooms and certain appliances therein. The business of plaintiff in error was conducted in a large building consisting of various rooms. Among those were two rooms in which certain engines and machines were operated. One of these rooms was referred to by the witnesses as the old engine room and the other as the new engine room. The old engine room was about thirty feet square, and the new engine room was about thirty feet wide from east to west and sikty feet long from north to south. The old engine room was located immediately west of the north half of the new engine room and was connected therewith by a large' opening, sixteen feet eleven inches in width and fourteen feet six inches in height, in the partition wall. When this opening was cut through the partition wall there were left -standing about four feet of the partition wall at the north end and about ten feet at the south end. Beginning near the north-west corner of the new engine room an iron stairway extended east along the north wall up to the condensing room above. This stairway was twenty-seven inches wide, and on its south side had a gas-pipe railing, which was two- feet eight inches above the stairs. An ammonia pipe, about seven feet from the floor, extended from the old to the new engine room through the large opening between those rooms, and this pipe was supported by an upright timber resting on the floor and standing in the large opening, about eight feet from the north wall. The old engine room contained certain engines and machines, the number and location of which do not clearly appear from the evidence. The location of two engines, however, is fixed about two feet west of the large opening between the engine rooms. The Ball ice machine referred to in the declaration was in the new engine room. It consisted óf an engine and an ammonia compressor. The engine was the west portion of the machine and the compressor the east portion. Between the engine and compressor, and seven or eight feet from the west side of the engine, was a large fly-wheel, which revolved at the rate of about forty-five revolutions per minute. The crank-shaft connected with this fly-wheel was on the west side of the engine and near the north end thereof. The engine was about twenty feet long from north to south. It sat on a concrete foundation, which was level with the floor of the engine room. A base-plate fifteen inches in width extended along the entire west side of the engine. The north three or four feet of this base-plate was twelve inches above the floor, and the balance inclined upwards towards the south until it reached a height of about four feet at the south end of the engine. The crank-shaft operated just inside of this base-plate. The west side of the engine was about three and one-half feet from the large opening and the south portion of the partition wall, and the north end of the engine was about three feet from the stairway above mentioned. Roloff was killed about half-past eleven o’clock in the morning of May 7, 1908. He had just finished his work of painting and whitewashing in the old engine room, where he had been engaged for several days, and was in the act of moving the scaffold on which he worked from the old engine room to the stairway leading up from the new. engine room to the condensing room.. The planks used in constructing the scaffold were two inches thick, nine inches wide and fourteen feet long, and weighed about fifty pounds each. Roloff had taken two of the planks from the old engine room and placed them upon the stairway, and was engaged in moving the third and last plank from the old engine room to the stairway when he was killed.’ The manner in which he carried the first two planks to the stairway is not disclosed. The evidence shows that the last plank, just before Roloff started to move it, was on the floor, the greater portion being in the old engine room, south of the large opening above mentioned, and a small portion extending in a north-easterly direction through the opening into the new engine room; that Roloff, facing west, picked up the plank and walked backwards in a north-easterly direction, and in so walking came in contact with that portion of the base-plate of the engine which was twelve inches above the floor and fell backwards, in a sitting posture, upon the base-plate, with the plank across his lap, and was almost instantly thereafter struck by the crank-shaft and killed. There was also evidence tending to show that by order of plaintiff in error no lights were burning in the engine room at the time of the accident, notwithstanding it was a dark, cloudy day and objects could not be clearly discerned in the engine room without artificial light.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roloff-v-luer-bros-packing-ice-ill-1914.