Springer v. Ford

88 Ill. App. 529, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 588
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 10, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Ill. App. 529 (Springer v. Ford) 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
Springer v. Ford, 88 Ill. App. 529, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 588 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was injured July 7,1895, by the falling of appellant’s freight elevator, which was being operated for the use of his tenants generally, in an eight-story building on Canal street in Chicago, and brought suit to recover for his injuries. A trial in June, 1898, resulted in a verdict in appellee’s favor for $5,000, but a new trial was granted. A second trial in April, 1899, resulted in a verdict for appellee of $7,500, upon which, after a remittitur of $2,500, the court rendered judgment for $5,000, from which this appeal is taken.

The declaration on which the trial was had, consists of six counts, the first of which as amended, in substance, charges generally that appellant wrongfully and negligently suffered said elevator and its attachments and appliances therewith connected to be and remain out of order and in an unsafe and dangerous condition, -weak and insufficient, and in that condition negligently operated it; the elevator rack broke and by reason thereof the elevator fell, causing the injury. The second, third, fifth and sixth counts allege negligence in that the appellant allowed the elevator rack to remain in bad condition and so operated it, by means of which the accident was caused. The fourth count charges the employment of an incompetent inspector of the elevator; that his incompetency was known to appellant and that on account of defective inspection by said servant the attachments used in the operation of said elevator were allowed to remain in a weak and unsafe condition, whereby it was caused to fall, and the plaintiff injured. The plea was the general issue.

It appears from the evidence that for a number of years prior to the accident the Kinsella Glass Company, a corporation, which was the employer of appellee, had been a tenant of appellant and occupied the sixth floor of the building, which was then equipped with two elevators, one a passenger and the other a freight elevator, the latter of which caused the injury to appellee; that these elevators were operated by the servants of appellant for the benefit and use of all the tenants in the building, the freight elevator being used for the purpose of carrying freight up and down from one floor to another , in the building, and that the glass company and its employes, as well as all the other tenants in the building, and their-employes, used this elevator for the purpose of carrying freight of different kinds to and from the respective portions of the building occupied by such tenants; that it was customary during the whole time that appellee was employed by the glass company, which was from May 18, 1895, until the day he was injured, for any one having freight carried on this elevator, to go up or down, as the case might be, with the freight, to put the freight on the elevator and remove it, but it was not the custom for any one to ride upon the freight elevator unless he was taking freight thereon; that persons having occasion to go to the upper floors of the building or to descend therefrom, when not taking freight, rode on the passenger elevator; that appellee understood before he was injured that it was not proper for passengers to ride upon the freight elevator unless they had freight to take up or down, and he never rode on it except when taking freight, but instead used the passenger elevator, which was more convenient to the premises of his employer than the freight elevator for him, when not desiring to take freight up or down; that appellee’s employment was in the shipping department of the glass company, and his duties required him to go up and down in the building from forty to sixty times per day, and in so doing he always rode upon the passenger elevator, except when he had freight of some kind to take up or down; that among his duties was that of taking sand, glass filings, scrap papers and sweepings up and down in the building; that aboutl0:30 in the morning that hewas injured, he had collected some scrap paper and sweepings in a barrel, which Jie rolled from his employer’s premises to a point near the elevator on the sixth floor, and called for the elevator, which came up from below, in response to his call, to the sixth floor, when he rolled the barrel onto the elevator and the operator shut the elevator door; that then the operator received another call from the top floor, to which he responded, and stopped the elevator at the eighth floor, when he walked toward the door on that floor to raise it. What then occurred is described by the plaintiff (he being the only witness in that regard) as follows:

.“At that the elevator gave a jerk and he ran to it and pulled. I don’t know whether he pulled up or down, but the elevator went to the ceiling and I do not remember any more. It fell. When I came to I was in the county hospital.”

There is a great mass of evidence with regard to the condition of the elevator rack, the manner in which the elevator was operated, and in descriptions of the different parts of the elevator and the machinery and appliances used in its operation, as well as with reference to the inspection of the elevator and its appliances, and what was necessary and proper in that regard in order to make the use of a freight elevator ordinarily and reasonably safe for use under the circumstances in question in this case. The evidence shows that the principal and most important part of the machinery and appliances of this elevator was what is known as the elevator rack, it being so described in the declaration and by the witnesses in their testimony. This rack consists of a piece of cast iron about three feet in length, about one and one-half inches wide and the same thickness, including the cogs, which extend almost from one end of the iron rack to the other on one side. On the opposite side of this iron from the cogs is a slot extending along the center of the iron about eighteen inches in length, from about nine inches from one end to within about five inches of the other end, and of a depth of about five-sixteenths of an inch and three-fourths of an inch in width. This rack is inclosed in a cast iron housing about twenty inches in length, in which the rack works back and forth as far as it is permitted by a set screw which passes through the housing near its lower end and into the slot of the rack, the upper end of the housing being fastened by leg screws to the ceiling of the basement floor near the engine which runs the elevator. The lower end of the rack is connected by a rod with the steam valve of the engine, and the operator of the elevator, by pulling the cable up or down, as the case may be, moves the rack up or down, and thus causes the elevator to ascend or descend. The cogs of the rack, as it passes up or down, fit into a small cog wheel which works on a pinion in the side of a housing about one foot below where the housing is fastened to the basement ceiling. The purpose of the set screw is to hold the rack in place and to prevent its movement up or down further than the length of the slot, which is about eighteen inches, and is on the opposite side of the rack from the cogs.

On the trial there was used for purposes of illustration before the court and jury, and which was also offered in evidence attached to the bill of exceptions, made a part of the record in this cause and transmitted from the Circuit Court to this court, a complete rack and housing such as was used in the operation of the elevator at the time of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Ill. App. 529, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springer-v-ford-illappct-1900.