Voss v. Morris & Co.

169 Ill. App. 514, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 19, 1912
DocketGen. No. 16,525
StatusPublished

This text of 169 Ill. App. 514 (Voss v. Morris & 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
Voss v. Morris & Co., 169 Ill. App. 514, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baldwin

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $7,500 in the Superior Court of Cook County against appellant, Morris & Company, for fatal injuries received by deceased while in its employ. Upon a previous trial, a verdict for a like amount was rendered, and was set aside by the court, which granted a new trial.

At about six o’clock P. M. of May 2, 1906, one Joseph Hickish, an engineer in charge of the engine room at appellant’s plant, apparently out of the line of his employment, and without being ordered or directed to do so, left, his engine room and went to the fume condensing tank, about thirty feet away, for the purpose of making a repair upon it to prevent foul odors entering the engine room during the night. The duty of making this repair was that of the steamfitters who worked on the day shift. Hickish went down into the tank where he was overcome by the foul gases. One Searing attempted to go down into the tank at the bottom of . which Hickish was lying, but finding that he was being overcome by the gases, he climbed up the .ladder and got out of the. tank. Thereupon word having gotten about that Joe Hicldsh was down in the tank, men from various departments gathered at the tank and attempted to rescue. him. For that purpose, Wiliam Voss went down into the tank where he, too, was overcome, and when both he and Hickish lost their lives.

The case was tried upon the first and the third and fourth additional counts as amended. The first count alleges that Hickish was inside, the condensing tank for the purpose of making repairs, and had been overcome by the noxious gases, and that Voss was employed as a water tender; that the superintendent negligently ordered him to go into the tank for the purpose of assisting Hickish, and that by the use of due care, appellant should have known that it endangered the life of Voss to order him into the tank; that Voss obeyed the order, and, while using due care for his own safety and in ignorance of the risk and extent of the danger, he went into the tank and was overcome.

The third count, as amended, alleges that in the course of appellant’s business it was necessary for various of its servants from time to time to enter the condensing tank to make repairs, to do which it was necessary to draw off the water ordinarily in the tank; that when the water was drawn off, gases from the rendering tank accumulated, filling the tank and making it dangerous to life; that Voss entered the tank with appellant’s knowledge and authority for the purpose of assisting another pf appellant’s servants who had been making repairs to said tank, and who had been overcome by the gases; that it was the duty of appellant to provide a safe place in the tank for Voss to do the work; that appellant failed to furnish such a safe place to work; that appellant had knowledge of the dangers and that Voss was ignorant of the risk and extent of the danger, and went into the tank in connection with said repairs to assist the other servant within the tank, and through appellant’s negligence was overcome by the fumes.

The fourth count, as amended, alleges that in the course of appellant’s business it became necessary for divers of its servants from time to time to enter the tank for the purpose of making repairs upon it, etc. That to make repairs it was necessary to draw off the water, and this permitted the fumes to accumulate and so fill the tank so that persons could not enter it without great danger of suffocation; that Voss was in appellant’s employ as a water tender in the boiler room; and that it became his duty in connection with said repairs to go down into the tank for the purpose of assisting another servant of appellant, who was in the tank; the tank was full of gases, which appellant knew, or should have known, in time to have prevented the injury; that Voss was ignorant of the danger and of the method of clearing the tank of gases; that he was about to descend into the tank for the purpose of assisting and saving another workman, who had been overcome in the tank; that the foreman by due care would have been' aware of the risks and dangers of entering the tank; and it became appellant’s duty to warn Voss of the risks and danger and inform him that the tank contained poisonous fumes,- which could not be breathed; that appellant negligently failed to warn Voss of these risks and dangers, and that without knowledge on his part he entered the tank for the purpose of assisting and saving the other employe and was overcome by gas.

A plea of Statute of Limitations was filed to these amended counts because it is claimed that they embodied new theories of negligence; viz., that Voss entered the tank with the knowledge and authority of appellant to assist the engineer, who had been overcome by gas, whereas the original theory was that Voss was ordered to go into the tank in the line of his work,—but the court sustained a demurrer to this plea.

In the record are photographic views and plans and specifications of the tank. From these it appears to have been constructed entirely of metal; it was an upright cylindrical body six feet in diameter. In the upper end, which was convex, or crowning, was the manhole, 16 in. x 22 in. in size, through which to gain access to the inside of the tank. The straight perpendicular part, or outside, of the tank extended from the top downward a distance of eight feet, from which point it was sloped inward and downward in an inverted cone shape so that at a distance of 2% feet down from the plane of the bottom of the full size of the cylinder, it was reduced to twelve inches in diameter. This tank was so set that it was thirteen feet up from the floor of the room to the manhole in the convex or crowning upper end of the tank. It was constructed entirely of new materials and new pipes, and had never before been out of order. Its purpose was to condense fumes from the rendering tanks and thus prevent the escape of foul odors. It stood in a sort of an alley way about fourteen feet from the engine room, and adjoining the tank room, in which last were the tanks where the lard and offal were cooked. The fumes passed in steam vapor through pipes from the tank room building, and then through a three inch pipe leading from the tank room into the condensing tank. This pipe entered the condensing tank at the top and extended downward till near its bottom end. Cold water was continuously running into this tank. A part of the air containing the foul odors was condensed and passed out from the bottom of the tank into the sewer; while some of the odors passed up through the water to its surface and then through another pipe into the combustion chamber in the boiler room where they were passed through the fire up the chimney and thus consumed.

On the day of the accident, one Searing, called a watchman, by appellant, but by appellee deemed a foreman, came to his work with the night shift about 5 -.30 P. M. He attempted to close the valve at the bottom of the tank, but was unable to do so. He walked to the engine room and asked one Zimmer, an oiler there, if he knew what was the matter. Zimmer tried but could not close the valve and told him to see Hickish, the engineer. Hickish tried the valve and concluded that something had fallen into it from the inside, and it was found that a piece of the three inch pipe carrying the fumes into the tank had fallen into the valve, and this prevented it from being closed.

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Bluebook (online)
169 Ill. App. 514, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voss-v-morris-co-illappct-1912.