World's Columbian Exposition v. Lehigh

63 N.E. 1089, 196 Ill. 612
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 1089 (World's Columbian Exposition v. Lehigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
World's Columbian Exposition v. Lehigh, 63 N.E. 1089, 196 Ill. 612 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

-This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a- judgment of the superior court of Cook county for $2000 in favor of appellee, William J. Lehigh, against appellant, in an action on the case for personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of appellant’s employee, who, it is averred in the declaration, was not a fellow-servant of appellee. At the close of all the evidence appellant moved the court to exclude the evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff and to instruct the jury to find the defendant not guilty, and offered an instruction to that effect, which the court refused to give.

Two grounds are urged for reversal, the first being the refusal of the court to give the instruction directing a verdict for defendant; and second, the refusal to give an instruction telling the jury that appellee was not entitled to recover upon the second count of his amended declaration. As to the second ground, it is only necessary to say that that count in the declaration was dismissed on the calling of the cause for trial and no evidence was offered under it, and there was no occasion for giving the instruction.

Under the first contention, the case really depends upon whether appellee and one John Smith Elisius, commonly called and hereinafter referred to as Smith, were fellow-servants. The facts are not disputed. Appellant offered no evidence except three photographs of a model exhibited by appellee to the jury and used in the progress of the trial. All the witnesses agree substantially as to every material fact upon which there is any evidence. Prom the record it appears that appellee, a painter and calciminer, was on January 7, 1893, engaged in painting in the Manufacturers’ building, on the World’s Pair grounds, in the city of Chicago. This building was about 1700 feet long by 800 feet in width and covered nearly forty acres of ground. There were at that time and place about one hundred persons employed whose work was similar to that of appellee, all under the same foreman and the same assistant foreman. A part of this force of painters was engaged where it was necessary for them to use scaffolds or stages, which were suspended from beams by ropes and pulleys, so that they could be lowered to the desired height by the painters using them. They were hung by riggers or sailors, who were familiar with the handling and tying of ropes. These stages were made by suspending ladders horizontally, with boards or planks upon their upper surface, and were about twenty-five feet in length, supported at each end by ropes and tackle. There were about thirty of these stages in use in this one building, and they were hung adjacent to each other. Upon each of these stages, when in use, were'sometimes two but usually three men, called a “gang.” At the time of the accident there were but two men on the stage where appellee was,—appellee and one Bell. On the next stage south of them there were three men. Each gang painted a “stretch” or strip of about the same width as the length of the stage upon which they worked. In this way the stretch painted by one gang would meet at the end with the stretch painted by the next gang. The members of a gang might be changed at any time, but usually the personality remained the same where the members were found to work well together. The gangs, however, were changed from place to place and from one stage to another. When a stage was lowered to the floor the painters would go to another stage which had already been hung by the riggers and begin paintiug, while the riggers would remove the lowered stage to another place and make it ready for the painters. The business and employment of appellee was the same as that of the other painters. Each had his own brush and bucket while at work, but at night they were all put together, and the next morning each man selected one for himself without regard to whether he had used it the day before or not. The appliances were all rigged in the same manner and used interchangeably by the men. Appellee had worked in this same building for about five weeks, prior to which time he had worked in the Mines and Mining building, where he and Bell had also worked together. A gang, in working, would be arranged, one man at each end of the stage and one in the middle. The end men steadied themselves by holding to the suspension ropes, and the middle man was provided with a “life line” or rope suspended from some support directly above him. At the time this accident occurred the men were painting the sloping interior of the roof, and thus it was necessary to keep moving the stages nearer the side of the building as the painters descended, in order that they might keep within reaching distance of the space to be painted. Each gang, independently, performed this shifting of their respective stages. In this work of shifting stages the duties of each gang were confined to their own stage and the stages shifted independently of each other, and the men of each gang arranged the work to be done in shifting between themselves. No particular man was assigned by the foreman or assistant foreman to any particular position or duty on the stage. The day of the accident the stage on which appellee was working and the stage next south, on which one Smith was the middle man, extended north and south in a line with each other. The Smith gang, consisting of three men, had worked for several weeks together. At the time in question appellee’s gang consisted of himself and one Bell, their middle man not being with them on this afternoon. Smith and appellee were unacquainted with each other, and they were unable to say whether they had or had not worked on adjacent stages before that particular time. These two gangs had begun work on their respective stages after lunch on the day of the accident. When it became time for the Smith gang to shift their stage, the two stages were not even, some witnesses placing appellee’s stage five to twelve feet below Smith’s and others placing appellee’s stage slightly above Smith’s. Appellee’s stage was about thirty-five feet from the floor of the gallery. While appellee and his co-worker, Bell, were engaged in their painting, Smith went aloft to untie the ropes of the stage on which he was working, preparatory to shifting it, but instead of untying the proper rope he untied the rope attached to appellee’s stage, causing it to drop some distance, which caused appellee to fall to the floor below, causing the injury complained of. It further appears that this work was being done during cold weather, and the large building in which they were working was being heated by salamanders. The men, at the noon hour, ate their lunches in the building, gathering around these salamanders, of which there appeared to be a number, and warmed their tea, and such other things as they cared to, over them.

The only variance in the testimony of appellee’s witnesses was as to a single proposition. ' All agree that at the time the stages or scaffolds were hung, on this particular day, they were in line and of the same height, and the evidence shows that appellee and Bell began work a little sooner than what has been designated the Smith gang.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 1089, 196 Ill. 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worlds-columbian-exposition-v-lehigh-ill-1902.