Rost v. F. H. Noble & Co.

232 Ill. App. 430, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 92
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1924
DocketGen. No. 28,419
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 Ill. App. 430 (Rost v. F. H. Noble & 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
Rost v. F. H. Noble & Co., 232 Ill. App. 430, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 92 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $3,000 upon a verdict returned in the trial of an action alleging the illegal employment by defendant of Joseph Zembrzusld, under the age of sixteen years, who received injuries in the course of his employment resulting in his death.

Defendant operates a factory for the manufacture of jewelry, occupying a five-storv building, in each floor of which is machinery operated by electric power, such as punch presses, drill presses and lathes, also elevators. Plaintiff claims that Zembrzuski was between the age of fourteen and sixteen years when employed by defendant, and that no employment certificate showing school record, physical fitness, age, etc., was issued or requested and filed by the employer as required by the Act concerning child labor, ch. 48, ¶ 44, Cahill’s Ill. Sts.

January 15, 1920, the. superintendent of defendant employed the hoy after he had signed an application card. He was instructed as to his duties by a foreman; these were soldering, working on a drill press drilling small holes, sometimes on a grinding machine, also sweeping the floors and at times assisting in pulling material from the second to the third floor by a hand elevator. When sweeping the floor it would be necessary for him to move large boxes filled with pins; sometimes he would be sent on errands by the superintendent and told to carry boxes filled with lead pins, each box weighing from twenty-five to thirty pounds. He would carry two of these boxes and was obliged to rest at intervals.

When the boy was three years of age as a result of whooping cough he had hernia, which left a slight protrusion on the right side of the groin. With this exception he was apparently well. March 5, 1920, he went to work as usual. There was evidence tending to show that in the afternoon he was seen working near the freight elevator on the second floor and was in a stooping position laying down a heavy box about two and one-half feet long by two and one-half feet wide. Shortly thereafter he was observed to look pale and sick, wallring slowly and holding his hand to his right side. Upon his arrival home he looked pale and sick and went to bed; his mother put bandages on his abdomen and kept them warm during the night. The following day the doctor was called and the boy was found to be suffering 0from a strangulated hernia. He was taken to the hospital and operated on and continued under the care of a physician, but died March 23. Physicians testified that the death was from strangulated hernia and that a boy who had incipient hernia would have this aggravated by the strain of lifting heavy boxes weighing about twenty-five or thirty pounds, and the gut would protrude so far that return circulation would be obstructed and strangulation would follow.

Defendant’s first point is that it was not shown by the evidence that the canse of action arose within the State of Illinois. Mrs. Zembrzuski, the mother, testified that since coming from the “old country” eight years ago, she had lived on Commercial avenue, in the City of Chicago, and her husband and Joseph lived there until Joseph died. Other witnesses who were employed at the factory of defendant at Fifty-ninth and "Wallace streets lived in Chicago. The officer of the Chicago public schools having charge of the records of the Board of Education of the City of Chicago was examined, without objection, as to whether these records showed an employment certificate issued to the deceased; also there was evidence that he attended public school on Escanaba avenue in Chicago. The jury could properly find that the cause of action arose in the City of Chicago.

Defendant apparently wished to show that the witnesses who testified that they saw the deceased stooping and laying down a heavy box near the freight elevator could not see this from the point where they were standing, and the superintendent and a clerk of the defendant were asked if a person standing at this point could see the elevator. Objection was made to this as calling for an opinion, and the objection was sustained. It is claimed that this is reversible error. Witnesses described fully the situation and conditions surrounding this place; there are also photographs in evidence showing the conditions. The jury could properly conclude from this evidence whether the witnesses who claimed to have seen the deceased at the time were testifying truthfully.

It might also be suggested that counsel for defendant did not state what they expected to prove by the answers to the questions objected to. If they expected the answer to be that it was impossible to see the point in question from the place where the witnesses stood, counsel should have so stated. We cannot say that the questions were improperly excluded until we know what the answers were expected to show. Ittner Brick Co. v. Ashby, 198 Ill. 562; Casey v. Reedy Elevator Mfg. Co., 166 Ill. App. 595.

The actual age of the hoy at the time of his employment was a controverted question of fact. Defendant claims that there were improper remarks made by plaintiff’s attorney on this point which influenced the jury. Plaintiff called as a witness a teacher in the Sheridan school and attempted to prove what the school record showed as to the boy’s age by asking the witness whether the record showed the age of the boy, to which the witness answered that it did. The witness was then asked what it showed as to his age, and objection to this was sustained. Plaintiff offered what purported to be a birth certificate of Joseph Zembrzuski, and objection to this was sustained. Subsequently, in arguing to the jury, plaintiff’s counsel referred to these matters, saying, in substance, that if defendant had wished to obey the statute it should have inquired of the proper persons at the Sheridan school to find out what the school record showed as to his age. This would seem to be legitimate argument, not as tending to prove the age of the boy, but as calling attention to the carefulness or otherwise of defendant when employing the boy in ascertaining his age. It was in evidence that there were two other boys employed by defendant about that time who were under sixteen years of age. In the argument of counsel this was referred to. As it was already in evidence it was a proper subject of comment as touching the good faith of defendant.

There are other criticisms of things said by plaintiff’s attorney in argument to the jury, but we cannot say that these were prejudicially improper when they are presented to us wholly disconnected from the context, and nothing appears as to what wTas said by defendant’s counsel on these points, which apparently plaintiff’s attorney was attempting to answer. Attorneys must be allowed a reasonable latitude in commenting on tbe evidence, and reasonable statements thereon and deductions therefrom must be allowed. Walsh v. Chicago Rys. Co., 303 Ill. 339.

It is also said that the court made improper remarks touching the evidence as to the age of Joseph. In commenting upon an objection to a statement bv the mother of Joseph as to his age, the court said in substance that it was from the mothers that persons generally knew their ages. This is a truism to which everyone could subscribe, and the comment is not reversible error.

There was no important variance between the declaration and the proof.

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Bluebook (online)
232 Ill. App. 430, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rost-v-f-h-noble-co-illappct-1924.