Wilcoxen v. State

46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 280, 1994 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedApril 13, 1994
DocketNo. 89-CC-1501
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 280 (Wilcoxen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcoxen v. State, 46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 280, 1994 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 21 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

Sommer, J.

The Claimant, an inmate with the Illinois Department of Corrections, seeks judgment against the Respondent, State of Illinois, in the sum of $40,000, arising from injuries allegedly sustained by the Claimant when he slipped and fell in the shower at the Graham Correctional Center in Hillsboro. The Claimants complaint alleges that in the morning of May 17, 1988, he left his cell to go to the shower. He attempted to turn the light on in the shower room, but the light would not come on. He alleges that he went to the housing unit control center and told a correctional officer that the light was not working. He contends that he was told by the correctional officer that it was known that the light was not working, but that the Claimant should still use the shower. The Claimant alleges that when he went to the shower, he stepped on a piece of soap, fell and injured his right elbow and back.

At the hearing the Claimant testified that he had just arrived at this cellhouse and had been medicated with a parasite preventative. He had been ordered to take a shower to wash the remnants of that medication off of his body.

The shower room was approximately six feet by five feet with a concrete floor and concrete walls. The floor was level, but there was a berm approximately six inches high that had to be stepped over to get into the shower. Water from the shower flowed up against the berm to prevent flooding. There was a light attached to the ceiling in the shower. The Claimant described the light as being a single bulb sticking out of the ceiling but screwed into an electrical socket.

There was no one in the shower when the Claimant went in. There were others present who had taken showers, and others were apparently waiting to use the shower. When an inmate enters the shower, he has to push a button to start the water running. Hot and cold adjustments of the shower water are done by correctional officers at some other location.

The Claimant estimated that he had used this particular shower approximately 10 times, and had not had difficulty. The Claimant was not in a hurry, but wanted to get the medication off of his body because it was itching.

The switch to the shower room was on the outside of the room, and was operated with a key. The key was like an ordinary house key. It functioned as a dual key to the inmates’ rooms and to turn the shower light on and off. This special kind of switch is found in penitentiaries so that persons cannot turn switches on and off with their fingers. As the Claimant approached the shower, the light was off. The door to the shower was open, and the light in the room was dim, according to the Claimant. The Claimant attempted to turn the light on, but failed. The Claimant “hollered” at the officers, and they heard him because they raised their hands in a salute to indicate that they had heard him. The Claimant testified that the guards told him to go ahead and take a shower.

He stepped over the berm and on to a piece of soap that threw his feet but from under him, and he fell on the concrete. He testified that he hurt his back and his right arm. Other inmates helped him to his bunk.

The Claimant contends that the correctional officers would not send him to seek medical care for a day and a night, and he testified that the next morning he went on sick call and showed his injuries to prison medical personnel. There was swelling, and x-rays were taken of the right elbow, back and head. The Claimant was taken to the doctors in Centraba, and ultimately underwent surgery on two separate occasions.

The Claimant was a sixty-year-old man who had spent most of his adult life as an inmate with the Illinois Department of Corrections. He contended that his back and right arm bothered him, and that his right arm was hurting during the hearing. He described the pain as “stinging.” He testified that he had headaches all the time, and had been treated for the headaches with Anacin and Motrin.

The Claimant contended that prior to the injury, he could lift, but he couldn’t lift at the time of the hearing. He used to drive trucks but he cannot drive trucks now because it involves sitting straight all the time. The Claimant did not believe he could work in sheet metal as he had in the past. His right arm had not been injured prior to this incident, and he had had no back injuries before this incident. The Claimant contends that the headaches he has had since the injury were greater than those he had experienced prior to the injury.

The Claimant stated that on past occasions when he had taken a shower, the shower room floor was normally wet. He had seen small pieces of soap on the floor previously. The Claimant stated that as he approached the shower room, he did not look at the floor. He stepped over the berm or curbing at the entrance to the shower room, and when he put his weight down he fell. The Claimant states that he was shown the piece of soap he fell on, and it was approximately 2 inches long and half an inch thick.

William A. Whitley was called by the Respondent as a witness for the State. Whitley is the maintenance supervisor at the institution in question. He testified that light bulbs that expire are repaired through a work order. Whitley stated that he reviewed the work orders for the month of May, 1988. Whitley testified that he had no work order for a burned out light bulb in a shower from May 15, 1988, through May 21, 1988, when asked that question by the Commissioner. Whitley testified that he could not say whether there were light bulbs burned out in the shower on the day in question.

Under questioning by the Commissioner, Whitley testified that it is not unusual for it to take five days to replace a burned out light bulb after a work order. Whitley testified that it was possible for a light bulb to go out on the eighteenth or nineteenth of May that would not be repaired until the twenty-fifth. Usually work orders are dated on the day that they are sent in. Sometimes the work orders do not bear a date. Whitley did not know how long it took work orders to get to him. When Whitley receives a work order to replace a bulb with no date, he does not know how long the light bulb had been out.

Whitley testified that all light bulbs in the shower rooms have a protective cover. Under the cover there is a single light bulb. Work orders must be utilized to change defective light bulbs. Guards are not allowed to “mess” with any of the electrical or maintenance needs of the institution. The covers on the lights in the showers can only be removed through the use of special equipment.

Correctional officer Matthew Wells was called and testified on behalf of the Respondent. Wells did not remember any incident where the Claimant claimed to have been hurt falling down in the shower. The witness testified concerning the degree of light that exists in the shower rooms. There was a window in the shower room.

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Related

Blankenship v. State
48 Ill. Ct. Cl. 264 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. Ct. Cl. 280, 1994 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcoxen-v-state-ilclaimsct-1994.