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137 Nat'l Corp. Rep. 1 (1958)

handle is hein.journals/natcorprep137 and id is 1 raw text is: 
DEVOTED TO GENERAL NEWS, LAW, COMMERCE AND ]FINANCE


    Published at
1207, 8 S. Dearborn St.
    Chicago, Ill.
    Telephone
  RAndolph 6-0661

    ESTABLISHED
    June 23, 1 890.


Volume 137. Number 1.                                      CHICAGO, JUNE 20, 1958                       Subscription $5 a Year. Ten Cents a Copy


    EDWIN HALL COOKE, OFFICIAL
           REPORTER.
    (Volume 13, Second Series.)
    (Illinois Advance Sheets.)
    Kennerly,  appellee,  vs.
 Shell Oil  Company,, appel-
 lant. (Schaefer, J.) Vol. 13
 (2nd), p. 431. (No. 34523.-
 Judgment    affirmed.)  In-
 juries -  owner,  contractor
 and su bcontract or are
 equally  bound   to  comply
 with provisions of  Scaffold
 Act.  Every owner,  contrac-
 tor  and   subcontractor  is
 equally bound to comply with
 the provisions of the Scaf-
 fold Act of 1,907, and in case
 of a wilful failure to comply
 with its provisions each is
 liable to the party injured
 *for any direct damages sus-
 tained by reason of such fail-
 ure, and the owner's liability
 to the person injured cannot
 be evaded  by  any contract
 with the contractor or sub-
 contractor.
   Construction-meaning   of
P statute will not be changed
after long continued judicial
construction. Where   a par-
ticular construction has been
given  to a statutory provi-
sion by the Supreme  and Ap-
pellate  Courts   for  many
years, and where  in the face
of   such  construction, the
General   Assembly   has re-
enacted  the provision with-
out  changing  the language
in question, the S u p r e m e
Court  is no  longer free to
change   the meaning  of the
language  by construing it in
a  different manner.
   Injuries -   Workmen's
 Compensation  Act  does not
 bar right of employee to re-
 cover  from   owner  under
 Scaffold Act. The  Scaffold
 Act  imposes  a duty  upon
 both the o w ner  and  con-
 tractor, the duty  of each
 being  independent  of  the
 other, and neither can escape
 his duty by pointing to the
 other's breach of duty, and
 where injury is caused to an
 employee  of the contractor
 y   reason of  the  owner's
 'wilful violation of the act
 or by his wilful failure to
 comply with any  of its pro-
 visions, the owner is liable
 regardless of the  fault or
 liability of the contractor-
 employer, and it may not be
 contended  t h a t recovery
 against the owner is barred
 because the  injured party
 and his employer come with-
 in the  provisions  of  the
 Workmen's    Compensation
 Act.


   Same-Scaffold  Act is not
 invalid as being incomplete
 and as failing to establish a
 clear and intelligible stand-
 ard. The fact that the Scaf-
 fold Act makes  no attempt
 to define what shall be con-
 sidered or shall constitute a
 safe, suitable and  proper
 scaffold, but calls upon the
 jury to apply a generalized
 standard to particular facts
 in each case, does not render
 the act invalid as being in-
 complete and  as failing to
 establish a clear and intel-
 ligible standard, for by the
 very nature of things it is
 impossible for the  legisla-
 ture to describe in detail one
 set of conditions or circum-
 stances which would be ade-
 quate or  proper under  all
 circumstances.
   Same-what is a wilful
violation  of the ,Scaffold
Act.  To constitute a wilful
violation of the Scaffold Act
it is not necessary that there
should  have been a reckless
disregard  of its provisions,
and  an employer is liable not
only  when   the  dangerous
conditions are known to him,
but  also when by  the exer-
cise of reasonable care the
existence of such dangerous
conditions could have  been
discovered-and become
known  to him, and where the
evidence  discloses that the
floor of  the scaffold from
which  the plaintiff fell was
made   of loose boards, that
it had no hand rail, and that
defendant, the owner  of the
premises, knew the scaffolds
were  being used, defendant
is liable, under the act, for
the plaintiff's injuries, and
it cannot escape the manda-
tory  duty that the  statute
imposes  by closing its eyes
to existing conditions.
          *  *  0,
  Bonczkowski  et al., appel-
lants, vs. Edmund  Kuchar-
ski, Registrar of Titles, et
al., appellees. (Daily, J.)
Vol. 13 (2nd), p. 443. (No.
34555. -  Decree  affirmed.)
Wills-joint  will  must  be
capable  of being  probated
separately as to each testa-
tor. A joint will is a single
testamentary   instrument
containing the will of two or
more persons executed joint-
ly and  disposing  of prop-
erty which they owned joint-
ly, in common  or in sever-
alty, the dispositions of the
property  of each maker  as
   (Continued on page 9)


RECENT ILLINOIS SUPREME

        COURT DECISIONS


RECENT ILLINOIS

APPELLATE          COURT

       DECISIONS
       FIRST DISTRICT
         First Division
  Presiding Justice Ulysses S.
  Schwartz, Justice John V. McCor-
  mick, Justice Edwin A. Robson.
        Second Division
  Presiding Justice Roger J. Kiley,
  Justice John CharlesLewe, Justice
  Arthur J. Murphy.
         Third Division
  Presiding Justice Joseph Burke,
  Justice Hugo M. Friend, Justice
  James R. Bryant.
  Clerk, Leslie V. Beck.
  Digested for THE NATIONAL COR-
  PORATION REPORTER by Frederick A.
           Rowe, Jr.
   47366. June 4, 1958. Kor-
 dig  etc., plaintiff-appellee,
 vs. Grovedale  0 1eander
 Homes,  Inc., defendant-ap-
 pellant. Appeal  from  Mu-
 nicipal Court of Evanston.
 Judgment reversed and
 cause remanded  with direc-
 tions. (Burke, P. J.) Per-
 sonal injuries-Minor   fall-
 ing off  basement  stairs-
 Railing on stairs of ordinary
 construction and without de-
 fect-Property  having been
 conveyed to parents before
 accident-Defendant  builder
 ceasing to have any connec-
 tion with property-Absence
 of extra rail not a latent or
 concealed defect. Plaintiff,
 a minor,  suffered injuries
 when  he fell off the base-
 ment stairs of a house which
 defendant had  constructed
 and sold to plaintiff's par-
 ents. Plaintiff based his case
 on the absence of an extra
 rail extending between the
 handrail and the  basement
 stairs. The jury returned a
 verdict for $40,000 and judg-
 ment was entered on the ver-
 dict. Defendant's  motions
 for a directed verdict, for
 judgment   notwithstanding
 the verdict and in the alter-
 native for a new trial were
 overruled. Defendant   ap-
 peals from  the  judgment
 against it. The court held
 that the railing on the base-
 ment stairs was of ordinary
 construction. The   railing
 was without defect. At the
 time of plaintiff's fall, the
 right to admit  or exclude
 persons from the house was
 in his parents. Eight days
 before plaintiff's injury de-
 fendant had ceased to have
 any  connection  with  the
 property which   had  been
 conveyed to the parents. The
 railing complied with..the
 plans made a part of thi-dd`ni
 tract. The contract ma&% -
-tween the parents and  de-
fendant superseded previous


contract  or contracts.pAny-
one   by  casual  inspection
could  see that there was no
extra  rail between the hand-
rail and the basement stairs.
From   the  time the parents
took  possession the respon-
sibility for the house, includ-
ing  the basement stairs, was
upon  them  and not upon de-
fendant.  Plaintiff failed to
establish that  there was  a
defective condition. The ab-
sence  of an  extra rail was
not a latent or concealed de-
fect. Plaintiff did not make
out  a case  and should  not
have  a judgment.  (Mr. Jus-
tice Bryant  rendered a spe-
cially concurring opinion.)
           *  *  *
   47372. June 4, 1958. Mar-
 riott, appellant, vs. Chesa-
 peake & Ohio Railway  Com-
 pany, a corporation, appel-
 lee. Appeal   from  Circuit
 Court of Cook  County. Af-
 firmed. (Bryant, J.) Prac-
 tice - Instruction standing
 alone subject to criticism-
 Other  instructions consid-
 ered together correctly ad-
 vising jury - Objectionable
 instruction not misleading
 jury nor prejudicing plain-
 tiff by its irregularities-
 Conduct of counsel not prej-
 udicial. This is an appeal
 from a verdict of a jury and
 a judgment  on that verdict
 finding the defendant  not
 guilty. This action wast
 brought to recover damages
 occasioned by  the  alleged
 breach by the defendant of
 the provisions of the Boiler
 Inspection Act with the suit
 being instituted under the
 Federal Employers'  Liabil-
 ity Act. The plaintiff urges
 as error the giving of onet
 of the instructions tenderedr
 by the defendant,  and the
 alleged improper conduct of
 the defendant's counsel as het
 made his  closing argumentr
 to the jury. The court helde
 that that instruction refersr
 to a defect. Standing alonec
 the instruction is subject toI
 criticism. It is not consid-I
 ered by the reviewing court
 to be artfully drawn or wise-
 ly given, and cannot be givent
 the reviewing  court's ap-
 proval. However, the plain-
 tiff tendered, and the trialt
 court gave, other  instruc-
 tions which  properly  set
 forth the obligation of the9
 defendant under the appro-
 priate statute. When thesec
 instructions are considered`
 together,, the Jury was cor-
 rel  disel   .:i*: regard to1
 thl-'i 9 of 'the' cas'e, aid.theF
 fYJIyA ;- M  te1 *di 0tigable
 in'staioh~ wculd  rif ilis-
 lead the jury, ad.the plain-1
tiff 19.4 *tqi;'Veen *prejudiced 1
   (ontinued  on page 9)


Digitized from Best Copy Available


PUBLISHED


Entered as Second Class
Matter, October 18,
1890, at the Post Office
at Chicago, Ill., under
Act of March 3, 1879.


Financial-Commercial
   ***Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.,
 in  its weekly  review   of
 wholesale commodity prices,
 June 10, says: The general
 commodity  price level slip-
 ped fractionally again this
 week. On June  9 it stood at
 279.76 compared with 280.75
 a week earlier and 289.10 on
 the corresponding  date  a
 year ago. The week-to-week
 decrease was attributed
 mainly to  lower prices on
 some grains, livestock, sug-
 ar, and rubber. Reports  of
 favorable  weather   condi-
 tions in growing areas dis-
 couraged grain trading this
 week, and most prices slip-
 ped below the previous week.
 Wheat futures prices dipped
 most noticeably following re-
 ports that harvesting of the
 Winter crop was underway.
 Corn trading was  sluggish
 during the week, and futures
 prices fell moderately. There
 was an appreciable drop in
 soybean futures  prices as
 buying lagged. Soybeans in-
 spected for overseas export
 for the week ended May  30
 amounted to 1,467,755 bush-
 els, compared with 918,020 in
 the prior week and 904,906
 a year ago. The major coun-
 tries involved  were  The
 Netherlands, Korea,   For-
 mosa, Japan, and Israel. Al-
 though prices climbed some-
 what, flour trading remained
 close to that of the preced-
 ing week. Buyers were wait-
 ing for a weakening in hard
 Winter flour prices. Com-
 mercial sales of flour for ex-
 port totaled  56.6 million
bushels in grain equivalent
this season, as against 43.6
million in the same  period
last season.  There  was  a
moderate  increase  in rice
buying this week, but prices
remained  at prior week lev-
els.  Export  commitments
made  by the Government in-
cluded sizeable shipments to
India, Indonesia,  and  the
Philippines. Wholesale buy-
ing of  sugar was  sluggish
this week, and prices slipped
below the prior period. Cof-
fee wholesalers reported lit-
tle change  in prices, and
trading was limited. An up-
surge in  interest in cocoa
occurred, and pricesclimbed
appreciably.   Cattle  pur-
chases lagged, and prices de-
clined somewhat.  Cattle re-
ceipts in Chicago slightly ex-
ceeded  those of  both  the
prior week and  the similar
period a year ago. Volume
in lambs was sluggish again,
and prices were down some-
what.  Hog  trading  picked
up, and prices were slightly
  (Continued on page 10)


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