DocketNumber: Gen. No. 12,795
Judges: Holdom
Filed Date: 10/29/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
We will proceed to decide this appeal upon the theory resting in the claim made on page 5 of appellant’s brief, that “the only question is, was the defendant negligent in furnishing a weak slab, so ¡that it broke under the weight of the deceased.”
The fundamental principle that a master must furnish a reasonably safe place for his servant to work, lies at the base of this case in determining the right to maintain this judgment. The slab in question was the place where the deceased must work in order to do that which at that particular titiie was incumbent upon him to do in virtue of his employment. It was to the same extent a necessary place on which he must work as scaffolding is ordinarily erected for, and by analogy the same duties rested upon the master as to the security of that particular slab as a reasonably safe place in which the servant may do the work of his master as attaches to the duties of the master who provides a scaffold upon which his servant must work, and the rule of law in such cases will govern here. In McBeath v. Rawle, 192 Ill. 626, affirming this court, 93 Ill. App. 212, the. Supreme Court said that the deceased was not estopped from saying to his employers, “As between you as master and myself as employe the law imposes upon you the duty of providing me with a sufficient scaffold, and although another party may have constructed it in pursuance of a duty which it owed you, still it was your.duty to me to see that it was securely and safely built.” This is apt language as applied to the deceased and appellant and the broken slab which caused the death of Larson. Larson had nothing to do with the making of these slabs; they were handed to him to be placed in the iron work to form a roof upon the train-shed; they were made by other employes of appellant.
- There are several incidents which point suspiciously to a lack of care in furnishing Larson with a slab sufficient to support him. It is in proof that the day before the accident no work was done in roofing the shed, because there were no slabs in condition tó be used safely. It is1 admitted that time was needed, after the slabs were made and set in the molds, in which to dry and harden sufficiently to be safely used. The date of making the slab in question, usually marked upon the slabs when soft, has not been shown. As to how recently it had been in the drying room or when it was made is left to conjecture and surmise. That which could have been made known to a certainty by evidence peculiarly within the control of appellant is left in doubt. That some question was made as to the strenght of this particular slab is evident, from the conversation which occurred at the time between Coster and the foreman Copps, when Copps said, “They will do. Be careful with them, but put them on.” Why did Copps think'care was needed? It may have been because of his knowledge that the slabs then being used were not sufficiently seasoned to make them of the strength needed. Such must have been the condition the previous day, when work was suspended because slabs were not in condition to be used with safety. Is not this more than likely from the action of suspension of the work and the testimony of Carter that “in the beginning the slabs were pretty good and hard,' and as we were getting along they commenced to get softer and softer all the túne.” (R. p. 140.) The proof is uncontradicted that the slab broke and precipitated Larson to his death when no one but himself was upon it, when usually three men worked upon it part of the time while putting it in place. The fact of the slab breaking while Larson was upon it is not conclusive evidence of itsweakness;yetitis,inthelight of all the other evidential facts, essentially corroborative. The destruction of the slab after examination ' by Donaldson succeeding the accident with, as he testifies, the evidence of the date of its manufacture • upon it, cannot be excused upon any reasonable hypothesis other than it was intentionally destroyed to conceal facts which might have been favorable to a recovery. The evidence disclosed by this slab was material and should have been preserved. All reasonable presumptions must be indulged against the one who destroys evidence pertinent to the issue. U. S. Brewing Co. v. Ruddy, 203 Ill. 306. The testimony of Donaldson and Mills as to the condition of the slab after the accident, in view of their destruction of if, is of little, if any, weight, and the jury were justified—if they did so—in disregarding it altogether.
The admission of the testuhony of Williams in rebuttal of the testimony of Nevins that a slab made as the one in question was would be “hard in twelve hours,” was not contrary to the rules of evidence, but if it were, it becomes unimportant when it is seen that the action of the court in withdrawing from the consideration of the jury by a peremptory instruction the whole question of the negligent or imperfect manufacture of the slab, thus in effect eliminating Williams’ testimony from the record.
We are unable to concur in the claim of appellee that statutory damages should be awarded on affirmance. This case neither upon principle of law nor fact comes within the statute or the ruling of the court in Potter v. Leviton, 199 Ill. 95.
There is no reversible error in this record, and the judgment of the Superior Court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.