Ryan v. Commonwealth Edison Company

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 28, 2008
Docket1-06-3309 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Ryan v. Commonwealth Edison Company (Ryan v. Commonwealth Edison Company) 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
Ryan v. Commonwealth Edison Company, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION March 28, 2008

No. 1-06-3309

DANIEL RYAN, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County, Illinois. ) ) ) No. 01 L 004073 v. ) ) COMMONWEALTH EDISON COMPANY, ) Honorable ) Bill Taylor Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding. )

JUSTICE JOSEPH GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

Electrician Daniel Ryan was injured in an on-the-job circuit breaker explosion. He

brought suit against Commonwealth Edison Company (Com Ed), alleging that Com Ed was

responsible for the electrical current that flowed into the building and that the severity of the

accident was increased by Com Ed’s negligent failure to adequately perform its ongoing

maintenance duties. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Com Ed on grounds

that Ryan’s claim was time-barred by the construction statute of repose, since it occurred more

than ten years after the electrical system was first installed. For the reasons that follow, we

reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

Viewing the evidence liberally in favor of the nonmoving party, as is appropriate under a

summary judgment motion (Purtill v. Hess, 111 Ill. 2d 229, 240, 489 N.E.2d 867, 871 (1986)), No. 1-06-3309

we are presented with the following description of events as alleged by Ryan:

Ryan was an electrician employed by the City of Chicago. On April 2, 2001, the day of

the accident, Ryan was working in the Heating and Refrigeration (H&R) building at O’Hare

International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, performing maintenance work on a circuit breaker. He

was working with Byron Glista, an employee of High Voltage Maintenance Corporation (High

Voltage). Com Ed installed and owned the transformer (known as transformer number 6) which

provided electricity to the circuit breaker.

The procedure for the maintenance operation was that Ryan would first remove the circuit

breaker from the cubicle in which it was housed; Glista would then perform the necessary repairs

on it, and Ryan would reinstall the circuit breaker in its cubicle. However, when Ryan reinstalled

this circuit breaker, it exploded, causing serious injury to Ryan.

Ryan filed a complaint in two counts. The first count was against Glista’s employer, High

Voltage. In that count, which is not currently at issue, Ryan contended that High Voltage

committed negligence through the actions of its employee and was therefore responsible for

Ryan’s injuries.

It is Ryan’s second count, which was against Com Ed, that is at issue in the instant appeal.

Ryan alleged that, at the time of the accident, Com Ed had a duty to exercise ordinary care in the

repair and maintenance of transformer number 6, which it had breached. Specifically, he alleged

that Com Ed:

“(a) Carelessly and negligently repaired and maintained transformer number 6 which

caused the [circuit breaker] to explode;

-2- No. 1-06-3309

(b) Carelessly and negligently failed to maintain and repair transformer number 6 in a safe

and reasonable manner given the activities then and there taking place; and

(c) Otherwise, carelessly and negligently maintained transformer number 6.”

Ryan further alleged that this negligent maintenance by Com Ed was the proximate cause of the

explosion, and thus, of the injuries he sustained.

On July 14, 2006, Com Ed moved for summary judgment. It argued that Ryan’s claims

against it were time-barred under the Illinois construction statute of repose (735 ILCS

5/13-214(b) (West 2006)), which forecloses all claims for negligent design that are brought more

than ten years after a fixture to real property has been installed. Because the parties agreed that

the power system at issue was over 20 years old, Com Ed contended that it was entitled to

judgment as a matter of law.

In support of its motion, Com Ed referred to a report prepared by John Nelson, the

electrical engineer retained as an expert by Ryan, as well as Nelson’s subsequent deposition

testimony. Com Ed contended that the only fault that Nelson found in Com Ed’s system was in

its original design and installation, as Nelson never alleged failure to repair as a cause of Ryan’s

injury.

Nelson based his report, dated June 7, 2004, upon a site inspection that he conducted on

April 10, 2001, eight days after the accident occurred, as well as various documents that he had

reviewed. In that report, Nelson stated that the transformers supplying power to the circuit

breaker involved in the accident were owned by Com Ed, and they were set up in such a way that

a resistor linked to the circuit breaker, which was supposed to reduce the electrical current to 300

-3- No. 1-06-3309

amps, was shorted out. Hence, in his professional opinion, one of the reasons that Ryan was

injured was that “ComEd was careless in the design, construction, commissioning, and follow-up

testing of the incoming power system.”

In his deposition, dated March 11, 2005, Nelson explained that electrical voltage is similar

to water pressure in a hose: the greater the voltage, the greater the flow of power. The purpose

of a resistor is to limit the flow of power. In this case, if the resistor at issue had been working

correctly, it would have restricted the electric current to 300 amps. However, Nelson stated that

the resistor had shorted out and become ineffective. As a result, the current flowing through the

circuit breaker at the time of the accident was unrestricted and could have been as high as 28,000

amps. Nelson gave his opinion that if the resistor had not been shorted out and the electrical

current had been limited to 300 amps, Ryan’s injuries from the accident would have been less

severe or possibly nonexistent.

In elaborating on the reasons for the resistor failure, Nelson stated that the transformer

installed by Com Ed included a component known as “neutral Xo bushing” that had shorted out,

thus causing the resistor to short out. Nelson opined that this bushing was probably placed when

the system was first installed.

Nelson further stated that in his report, he had said that Com Ed needed to change its

system setup to prevent the resistor from being shorted; nevertheless, when he went to inspect the

site again the day before he gave his deposition, he discovered that nothing had been done to

correct the problem. That is, he said that the configuration of the neutral Xo bushing had not

been changed and that the same dangerous condition still existed. He repeated his opinion that

-4- No. 1-06-3309

Com Ed’s flaws in its system exacerbated the injuries Ryan received in the accident as a result of

the negligence of his co-worker.

In his response to Com Ed’s motion for summary judgment, Ryan argued that the

construction statute of repose did not apply to his claims, because he was not alleging negligence

in the way the system was designed, but rather in Com Ed’s ongoing maintenance duties. “[T]he

Court should not allow Com Ed to convert Plaintiff’s negligence Count II of the Complaint

against Com Ed into a *** construction design case,” he urged. He further argued that there was

a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Com Ed’s failure to properly maintain the electrical

system was a proximate cause of Ryan’s injuries. In support of this contention, Ryan referred to

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