Union Wire Mattress Co. v. Wiegref

133 Ill. App. 506, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 297
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,247
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 Ill. App. 506 (Union Wire Mattress Co. v. Wiegref) 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
Union Wire Mattress Co. v. Wiegref, 133 Ill. App. 506, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 297 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant’s counsel, in their argument, contend: (1) There is a material variance between the declaration and the evidence. (2) If negligence is inferable from the evidence, it was the negligence of a fellow-servant. (3) The verdict must have been the result of surmise or conjecture, and therefore cannot stand. (4) The doctrine res ipsa loquitur is not applicable as between master and servant. (5) The court, in refusing defendant’s offered instructions numbered 24 and 25, erred.

We will consider those propositions in the order stated, and will assume that all questions not argue^ are waived.

It is averred in the declaration as follows:

“The said plaintiff was then and there ordered and directed by the said defendant to work around and about a certain large and high pile of pig-iron, and to remove and wheel away some of the said pig-iron from off and out of said pile, and whilst the plaintiff, in obedience to said orders, was then and there rightfully and with due care and diligence about his own safety and well being, proceeding with the performance of his said work, and working and being around said pile of pig-iron, the said defendant had then and there carelessly, negligently, wrongfully, improperly and recklessly placed and piled up the said large pile of pig-iron in an unsafe, improper and dangerous manner, in such way as to permit the various pieces of pig-iron composing said pile to easily slip and fall from their places, and the said pile to thereby fall and tumble over, and without placing any reasonably adequate or reasonably sufficient supports or other safeguards to hinder or prevent the said pile from falling, and thereby the said pile of pig-iron was rendered highly dangerous to the safety and well being of the plaintiff so rightfully working around the same, the dangers whereof were well known to the defendant, or by reasonable diligence could have been ascertained by it, but were unknown to the said plaintiff, and by means of the premises and by reason of the said improper piling and securing of the said pile of pig-iron as aforesaid, the said pile of pig-iron then and there suddenly fell and was precipitated with great force and violence down to, upon and over the body of the plaintiff, and he was thereby then and there greatly hurt,” etc.

There is no evidence that the appellee was ordered to “remove and wheel away some of the pig-iron from and off and out of said pile,” or that he was so engaged at the time of the accident, and the evidence, including appellee’s own testimony, is, that he was taking pig-iron from the pile or heap lying on the floor, and not from the pile which fell on him. There was, therefore, a variance. Hrnst, the first witness called by appellant, testified that appellee was engaged in takingjfciron from a mixed pile on the ground, about a foot and a half from the pile which fell, and not at all from the pile which fell, and, at the close of Hrnst’s testimony, the appellant’s attorney moved to strike out that part of his testimony as to the place from which appellee was taking iron, which motion the court disallowed. Appellant’s counsel contend the variance is material and fatal. In support of this contention counsel cite the following cases, without stating any of them, except the first: City of Bloomington v. Goodrich, 88 Ill., 558. The case was for injuries occasioned by a defective sidewalk, and the averment in the declaration was that the walk was out of repair, “to-wit, by some of the planks being broken, so that large and deep holes were in said walk, and the surface of the same became, and was, very rough, irregular and uneven.” The evidence failed to prove that any of the planks were broken, and showed that the only defect was that two of the planks had been removed from the walk. The variance was as to the cause of the accident, and the court held it fatal.

Pennsylvania Co. v. Conlan, 101 Ill., 93. This was a suit by an administratrix, for causing, by negligence, the death of her intestate. A witness identified a memorandum as one the deceased was using, in taking the numbers of the cars. Counsel objected to it on the ground that it was not alleged in the declaration that it was the duty of the deceased to take the numbers of the cars; that the allegation in each count of the declaration was, “that it became and was necessary for the deceased to pass over and upon said easternmost track, To give directions to others of his said co-servants, and to aid and assist in the switching, movement and operation of certain cars then being switched upon the westernmost track,’ ” citing a number of cases, among them the Goodrich case, supra, as sustaining the proposition that what the deceased was doing at the time was material, and must be proved as alleged. In respect to the objection, the court say: “Counsel are in error as to the effect of what is ruled in those cases. They announce, in substance, that if the pleader, though needlessly, describe the tort, and the means adopted in effecting it, with minuteness and particularity, and the proofs substantially vary from the statement, there will be a fatal variance,—and this was but following an old and well settled rule of common law pleading. 1 Chitty’s Pleading (7th Am. ed.), 427. But what deceased was doing at the time he received the injury, is no part of the tort, or of the means adopted in effecting it.” Ib. 102.

City of Rock Island v. Cuinely, 126 Ill., 408. In that case it was averred in the declaration, in respect to a sidewalk, that the city “wrongfully and negligently suffered the same to be and remain in bad and unsafe repair and condition, and divers of the planks wherewith the said sidewalk was laid to be and remain broken, loose and unfastened to the stringers thereof, by means whereof,” etc. The evidence does not show that any of the planks were broken, but did show that the walk was in bad and unsafe condition, and the planks thereof loose and unfastened, by reason of which the plaintiff was injured. Held, that the failure to prove that any of the planks was broken was immaterial, the averments of the declaration being broad enough to admit the proof made, and also being divisible. Ib. 411.

Ebserry v. C. C. Ry. Co., 164 Ill., 518, cited by counsel, is not the least in point.

In Wabash R. R. Co. v. Billings, 212 Ill., 36, it was averred in the declaration, that the plaintiff’s buggy, in which he was riding across the defendant’s track, was struck by defendant’s car or train, and the plaintiff was then and there thrown out and injured. The evidence was that the plaintiff was not thrown from his buggy by the car at the instant of collision with it, or at all, but that, when the buggy was struck by the car, his horse ran away, and that the buggy, in passing over a curb 80 or 100 feet distant from the defendant’s tracks, dropped 16 or 18 inches into a gutter, and the plaintiff was thrown out and injured. Held, that the averment was descriptive of the cause of action, and necessary to be proved, and that the variance was fatal, citing numerous cases.

In Ill. Cent. R’d Co. v. Chicago T. & T. Co., 79 Ill. App., 623, it was averred in every count of the declaration that the plaintiff was killed by the defendant’s engine while walking on a certain public highway known as 113th street, which was across the defendant’s tracks and right of way.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 506, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-wire-mattress-co-v-wiegref-illappct-1907.