Sertaut v. Crane Co.

172 Ill. App. 477, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 554
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1912
DocketGen. No. 17,082
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 Ill. App. 477 (Sertaut v. Crane 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
Sertaut v. Crane Co., 172 Ill. App. 477, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 554 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of $1,000 entered in the Circuit Court of Cook county April 30, 1910, in favor of appellee, hereinafter called plaintiff, in an action on the case brought to recover damages for personal injuries received February 1, 1904, occasioned by the falling of an elevator, while appellee was in the employ of appellant, hereinafter called defendant, as a laborer. The verdict and judgment were rendered on a second trial, — the first trial resulting in a verdict for $2,500, upon which the court entered judgment June 8, 1907. An appeal was taken to this court and that judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. Sertaut v. Crane Co., 142 Ill. App. 49. In its opinion the main court of this district, after elaborately setting forth the facts as they appeared from the transcript of the record of the first trial, said (p. 58): “We regard the evidence referred to as showing that the case is, to say the least, very close for the plaintiff, both on the question of the defendant’s liability, and the question as to the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries; and, therefore, the rulings of the court on evidence should have been substantially correct.” This court then referred to certain rulings made by the trial court, (viz: in refusing to allow the witnesses Noakes, the elevator operator, and Hayes to answer certain questions, and in refusing to permit defendant’s counsel to ask plaintiff, in any form, if he would consent to an examination of his person by a physician employed by defendant, particularly after plaintiff’s principal expert medical witness, Dr. Larson, had testified in respect to an examination made by him of plaintiff on the morning of the day he testified), which it considered were erroneous, and concluded: “Counsel for defendant have argued that the plaintiff suffered no substantial injury, and that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. A verdict for $2,500 in this cause cannot be sustained, except on proof of some permanent injury. The only permanent injury claimed is displacement of the plaintiff’s left kidney, and we think it manifest that such displacement has not been proved by the greater weight of the evidence. Upon inspection of the entire record and after careful consideration of the evidence and the arguments of counsel, our conclusion is that the court erred in overrule ing defendant’s motion for a new trial.”

After a careful examination of the transcript of the record of the second trial, now before us, and considering the “additional medical expert testimony,” which counsel for appellee in his brief says was introduced at the second trial, as well as all the other evidence in the case, we feel constrained to repeat the language of this court, viz: “The only permanent injury claimed is displacement of the plaintiff’s left kidney, and we think it manifest that such displacement has not been proved by the greater weight of the evidence.”

The plaintiff is a Lithuanian, was about twenty-seven years of age and had been in the employ of defendant as a laborer for about nine months, receiving as wages $1.75 per day. About six months after the accident plaintiff worked for the Lehigh Yalley Transportation Company, loading and unloading freight, and later was employed in a scrap yard, moving scrap iron from one side of the yard to another, and has since been employed at hard manual labor. The elevator on which plaintiff and others were riding was ■ operated by steam, and ran in a shaft which was enclosed on the north and south sides with wire netting. On the east and west sides there were bars at each floor which could be raised to allow passengers and freight to enter and be discharged from the elevator. At each floor there was a beam or header which formed the side of the elevator shaft, and which sustained the joists. The shaft was constructed of wooden columns. Attached. to the center uprights on the north and south sides of the shaft were wooden guide strips, which ran from the basement to the top of the shaft. There were cast iron guide shoes attached to the elevator cage, which ran along these wooden guides for the purpose of keeping the elevator in place. The elevator was controlled by a lever in the car by which the change valve on the steam chest of the engine was operated, so that by certain movements of this lever the car could be made to ascend or descend as desired. The cable by which the elevator was operated ran around two cast iron sheaves, or grooved wheels or pulleys, which were attached to the top of the car. By moving the lever in the car the operator conld tilt the sheaves one way or the other, and accordingly lengthen or shorten the cable, and thereby operate the change valve on the engine. About nine o’clock on the morning of the accident, plaintiff and another laborer entered the car on the basement floor with two wheelbarrows filled with sand to take to the foundry on ihe fifth floor. Noakes, the elevator operator, ran the car up to the first floor, where two other employes of defendant got on the car, — Sherlock, foreman of the milling room, and Hauser, a carpenter. When the fourth floor was reached, Sherlock stepped off. Just after this and after the elevator had started upwards toward the fifth floor, one of the sheaves on top of the car broke off. The operator lost control- of the car and the elevator ran down to the basement.

Plaintiff claimed he was injured when the car struck the basement. He testified, through an interpreter, on direct examination:

“When the car came to the basement I don’t know what happened then. It struck hard in the basement. * * * I was hurt all over the back and sides. * * * ijv^y -took me home. First they brought me to the company’s doctor. There they fixed me up; * * * two men brought me home and put me to bed * * * I don’t know who they were. * * * One man got on one side and took my arm, the other man on the other side took another arm. * * * I was laid up altogether six months.”

On cross-examination he testified:

“I lost consciousness when it fell on the ground. * * * I didn’t know anything from the time the elevator struck the bottom until I found myself in the doctor’s office. * - * * There were more than three or four places on my back where the skin was off. * * * There was a big hole in the small of my back and there were smaller ones on the sides. * * * When the elevator fell from the top to the bottom, I fell with it. * * * When I got to the bottom and the elevator stopped I was lying on my back. * * * I fell just across the middle of the wheelbarrow. There was sand in it. I fell in the sand. * * * The other men in the elevator fell down at the same time I fell. # # # They fell on top of one another. I don’t know if they got úp and went out of the elevator before I did. I didn’t see them.”

At the time of the second trial Noakes, the elevator operator, who testified at the first trial, was physically unable to appear in court, and by agreement of counsel portions of his testimony given on the first trial were admitted in evidence. In such admitted testimony, brought out on direct examination at the first trial, was the following:

“The elevator was between the fourth and fifth floors when the sheave broke. * * * The elevator dropped fast; * * * faster than its ordinary speed in descending. * * * It struck the bottom pretty hard.

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239 Ill. App. 479 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 Ill. App. 477, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sertaut-v-crane-co-illappct-1912.