Joan L. McGinnis, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Cosmopolitan National Bank and Trust Company, Individually and as Trustee Under Trust No. 4542, and T. K. Handing, Defendant-Appellant.
Gen. No. 51,502.
First District.
August 1, 1969.
113 Ill. App. 2d 113
Kralovec, Sweeney, Marquard & Scoby, of Chicago (Charles V. Kralovec and Glenn H. Prohaska, of counsel), for appellant.
Roland C. Upton and George F. Witteman, of Chicago (Samuel Levin, of counsel), for appellee.
MR. JUSTICE SMITH delivered the opinion of this court.
The defendant Handing was the beneficial owner of the property and also the president of the Amplifone Corporation. The legal title was in the defendant Cosmopolitan National Bank. The suit was dismissed as to the bank. Plaintiff was an employee of the Amplifone Corporation and after her coffee break at 10:00 p. m. returned to her winding machine on the first floor. She heard a co-worker call her by name and the sound seemed to come from a hole in the floor which had been cut for the purpose of installing a dumbwaiter or elevating hoist. She walked over to the opening in the floor, placed her hand on a protective wooden board about three feet high, leaned over this barrier and fell into the basement and sustained severe injuries. A special interrogatory submitted to the jury found the plaintiff was not guilty of any contributory negligence which proximately contributed to her injuries.
The plaintiff‘s first count charges a wilful violation of the Structural Work Act and Count II alleges that the defendant negligently violated certain provisions of the Chicago Municipal Code during the construction of the dumbwaiter as well as general common law negligence. The record shows that the reason the dumbwaiter was being put in the building was to enable the employees of Amplifone to move certain material from the basement to the first floor with greater ease. There
Elastic as the Structural Work Act has become, we do not think that fairly interpreted it can possibly relate to the facts in this case. In Bradley v. Metropolitan Sanitary Dist. of Greater Chicago, 56 Ill App2d 482, 206 NE2d 276, it was held that the Structural Work Act does not apply to an excavation for a drop manhole. The excavation or the dirt sides of this hole caved in killing the plaintiff‘s decedent. It was there held that a recovery under the Structural Work Act was not permissible. It was there properly held that a hole in the ground is not a mechanical device within the meaning of the Structural Work Act and by the same token it does not appear to us that a hole in the floor is a mechanical device for use in the alteration of a building. Plaintiff attempts to relate these facts to
Aside from our holding that the Structural Work Act is not applicable to the facts in this case,
“In civil cases the law is given to the jury by the court, and while counsel have the right to present their view of the law in argument, they have no right to read from law books to the jury.”
Plaintiff cites no authority for her position. The impropriety and the irregularity of reading the Structural Work Act to a lay jury is quite obvious. The 1967 Annotated Statutes contain reasonably close to 200 citations to cases arising out of
And we think it patent that the judgment in this case cannot stand or that the defendant can be said to have
Reversed and remanded.
TRAPP, P. J., concurs.
CRAVEN, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
MR. JUSTICE CRAVEN concurring in part and dissenting in part:
The action of plaintiff‘s counsel in reading extensively to the jury certain portions of the ordinances of the city of Chicago and certain sections of the Structural Work Act was improper and prejudicial, and in my view leaves this court with no alternative but to reverse and remand this case for a new trial. Accordingly, I agree with the result reached in the majority opinion.
I must respectfully note my disagreement, however, with that portion of the opinion that holds that the Structural Work Act is not applicable.
As I understand the Structural Work Act and the many cases interpreting it, it is designed to give protection to persons, not necessarily only construction workmen, in and about construction, alteration or demolition of buildings. The plaintiff here was not working in connection with the specific alteration on the premises but she was a worker on the premises and was injured by reason of a faulty barricade around a hole, and thus the Act has application. See: John Griffiths & Son Co. v. National Fireproofing Co., 310 Ill 331, 141 NE 739, 38 ALR 559 (1923); Claffy v. Chicago Dock & Canal Co., 249 Ill 210, 94 NE 551, affd 228 US 680, 57 L Ed 1022, 33 S Ct 715 (1911).
We are here concerned with the alteration of a building to construct a device to hoist or convey work products from the first floor of a cottage used in manufacturing to the basement. In connection with this alteration a hole or opening had been cut into the floor, and the evidence indicates that it was approximately 27 x 20 inches. The evidence further indicates that there was some plywood on one side, and on another to which employees on the floor had ready access, there was a barricade of sorts consisting of a piece of lumber, apparently a one-by-six, about three feet from the floor, attached to two uprights. There was nothing between this one-by-six and the floor. If, as the court held in Louis, the failure to provide scaffolding can be the basis of a cause of action under the Structural Work Act, the failure to provide adequate and safe barricades around a hole in the floor during the alteration of a structure can likewise be a violation of the Act. Accordingly, while I concur in the result reached, I dissent from that portion of the opinion which, in my view, construes the Structural Work Act contrary to its intended purpose.
