Zimmer v. Carlson

192 Ill. App. 466, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 861
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 28, 1915
DocketGen. No. 19,842
StatusPublished

This text of 192 Ill. App. 466 (Zimmer v. Carlson) 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
Zimmer v. Carlson, 192 Ill. App. 466, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 861 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this suit brought by appellee against appellant to recover damages for personal injuries, a trial by jury in the Circuit Court resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellant for $5,000.

While there is a conflict in the evidence relating to the material facts in the case, the jury were not unwarranted in finding the facts to be substantially as follows: On February 22, 1911, and for some time prior thereto, appellant operated a stone yard wherein appellee was employed in loading and hauling stone. Appellee and his fellow-servant, Olson, commenced work at the usual hour in the morning, and under the direction of appellant were engaged in unloading stones from a flat car and loading them upon a wagon, whereon they were hauled by a team to such points in the yard as appellant might direct. Appellee rode upon the wagon and drove the team. ' The wa¿’on was about fifteen feet in length, and the bed of the wagon consisted of two timbers each ten inches square, placed about a foot and a half or two feet apart. The surface of the timbers was about on a level with the platform of the flat car. The stones then being unloaded were about three or three and one-half feet square and six inches thick and were unloaded from the car and loaded upon the wagon by means of crowbars and rollers. Ordinarily a wagon load consisted of four stones, two stones one on top of the other being placed on the timbers between the front wheels of the wagon and two stones being placed in like manner between the rear wheels. Appellee had hauled five or six loads prior to the time he was injured. The load in question was placed on the wagon under the direction and with the assistance of appellant at about ten o’clock in the forenoon. When the wagon was loaded with four stones appellee observed that the top stone of the two in the front part of the wagon extended about five inches beyond the edge of the bottom stone. The stones were smooth surfaced and usually ashes or cinders were placed beneath and between the stones when loaded on the wagon to prevent them from sliding off. On this occasion no ashes or cinders1 were available for such use and none were used. Upon observing the condition of the front top stone, as mentioned, appellee told appellant that he should move the top stone back again, whereupon appellant said, “You go ahead on your wagon, mind your team and not the stone; the stone is all right.” Appellee testified that at that time the stone did not look very dangerous to him, but that he thought it might happen to slip off, and so called appellant’s attention to it. While the ground upon which the hauling was done was practically level, it had frozen after a thaw and was somewhat rough. Appellee placed a blanket on the front top stone, and sitting upon the blanket proceeded to drive the team, following appellant, who walked ahead of the wagon for the purpose of designating the point where he desired the stones to be unloaded and placed. When appellee had driven a distance of about fifty feet, the front top stone slipped off the wagon, carrying the bot-ton stone with it, and appellee was thrown to the ground and beneath one of the falling stones, and severely injured. While appellee was hauling the last preceding, load, he felt the stone upon which he was sitting slip, and jumped to the back part of the wagon to avoid being thrown off.

As bearing upon the issue of due care by appellee for his own safety, there was some evidence introduced by appellant tending to show that at the time the stones fell off the wagon the wheels on one side of the wagon were permitted by appellee to run over a pile of crushed stone in the yard, whereby the wagon was tipped up on that side, and the stones were caused to fall to the ground by reason of such tipping of the wagon. As to this question, the evidence is so closely conflicting that the verdict of the jury must be held to be conclusive against appellant.

It is clear that in the absence of the order or direction given by appellant to appellee, the latter must be held to have assumed the risk of the danger arising from the manner in which the stones were loaded upon the wagon; and the right of appellee to recover is dependent upon the solution of the question whether or not, under the facts in this case, such order or direction was operative to relieve appellee from the assumption of the risk.

Appellant does not controvert the general proposition that a specific, peremptory order or direction by a master to a servant to encounter a danger operates to relieve the servant from the assumption of the risk, but- it is insisted that the facts in the case at bar bring it within certain exceptions to the general rule, viz: (a) The order or direction by the master must actually mislead the servant into the belief that the danger does not exist; (b) where the order or direction by the master relates to an act to be done by the servant in- the general line of his employment, the rule does not apply.

A merely superficial consideration of the language employed in some of the cases cited by appellant might be held to promulgate the doctrine as applicable in all such cases that the servant may not avoid his assumption of the risk of a danger encountered in obedience to an order or direction of the master, where the servant has not been thereby misled to believe that no danger exists. Thus in Elgin, J. & E. Ry. Co. v. Myers, 226 Ill. 358, it is said at page 366:

“It is only where the servant has been misled by the assurance of the master, or someone standing-in the master’s place, that he can excuse himself from the assumption of the risk on the ground that he has been assured by the master that there is no danger in the use of the appliance or piece of machinery which he knows, as a matter of fact, is defective and the use thereof attended with danger.”

In Republic Iron & Steel Co. v. Lee, 227 Ill. 246, it is said:

“It is only where the servant has been misled by the order of the master that the exception exists.”

The doctrine, as thus stated, finds its application in cases wherein the master ordered the servant to do some act or perform some service which was included within the usual and general scope of his duties under his contract of hiring, and where the danger incident to a compliance with such order of the master was fully known and appreciated by the servant. McMahon v. Owsley, 260 Ill. 43.

In the case at bar, the stones were loaded upon the wagon by the direction and under the superintendence of the master, not, as the evidence tends to show, in the usual and customary manner, but in such manner that the top front stone was, under the existing road conditions, liable to slip or slide off the wagon and injure the servant, who, in the usual course of his duty, was required to ride upon the wagon and drive the team.

That appellee was aware of some danger incident to the manner in which the top front stone was loaded upon the wagon is apparent from the fact that he called the attention of appellant to the situation and requested him to have the stone moved back.

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Bluebook (online)
192 Ill. App. 466, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmer-v-carlson-illappct-1915.