{
  "id": 5285589,
  "name": "Woodrow Bradley, a/k/a Woodrow Green, Jr., and Douglas Bradley, a/k/a Douglas Green, by Odessa Bradley, Their Mother and Next Friend, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Appellant",
  "name_abbreviation": "Bradley v. Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago",
  "decision_date": "1965-03-03",
  "docket_number": "Gen. No. 49,270",
  "first_page": "482",
  "last_page": "490",
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    {
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      "cite": "56 Ill. App. 2d 482"
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T22:48:18.150379+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "McCORMICK, P. J. and ENGLISH, J., concur."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "Woodrow Bradley, a/k/a Woodrow Green, Jr., and Douglas Bradley, a/k/a Douglas Green, by Odessa Bradley, Their Mother and Next Friend, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Appellant."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "MR. JUSTICE DRUCKER\ndelivered the opinion of the court.\nThis is an appeal from a bench trial in which judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs for $51,000.\nThe appeal is based, initially, on the contention that plaintiffs have no cause of action under the Structural Work Act.\nDefendant contracted with Kenny Construction Company in July 1958 to do work on the Calumet Intercepting Sewer. On October 18, 1958, Woodrow Green, tbe putative father of the minor plaintiffs and an employee of Kenny, was working with an air spade (as a clay-cutter) in the vicinity of Doty Road and 130th Street in Chicago on an excavation for a drop manhole. Green was killed as the result of a cave-in in the excavation.\nThe suit was brought by the nominal plaintiff, Odessa Bradley, on June 7, 1960, as the mother and next friend of the two minor plaintiffs for whom Green was paying support under a court order in a paternity proceeding which had determined that he was their father.\nPlaintiffs\u2019 complaint alleged that \u201csupports, protective sheets, stays, coverings, and sidings are required to prevent soft mud, earth, clay from falling below upon workers in the shaft-pit\u201d; that defendant had a legal duty to comply with the \u201cScaffold Act\u201d and that defendant knowingly or wilfully violated and disregarded said Act by reason of which Green was injured and died.\nThe cause of action in the instant case was not based on negligence in failing to provide a safe place to work, nor was it a claim under the Workmen\u2019s Compensation Act which includes \u201cexcavating work\u201d as an extra-hazardous vocation. The complaint clearly and precisely based liability on the Structural Work Act. (Ill Rev Stats 1957, c 48, \u00a7 60 et seq.)\nDefendant argues that the Act applies only to aerial structures and those passing under or by them, that an excavation for a drop manhole does not fall within the ambit of tbe Act. Since there is no decision in Illinois constrning the applicability of the Structural \"Work Act to underground work, plaintiffs urge that we look to New York for guidance because of similarities in its scaffold legislation.\nPlaintiffs reason that a manhole is a structure within the Act because a New York court in 1913 held a concrete sewer to be a structure within its Labor Law Act of 1908. Armenti v. Brooklyn Union Gas Co., 142 NYS 420. That New York statute protected employees and others who were directed to perform labor on structures from unsafe scaffolds and other contrivances. It is clearly distinguishable from the Illinois Structural Work Act whose purpose is to protect persons working on scaffolds as well as those passing under or by them and to do so \u201cin such manner as to prevent the falling of any material that may be used or deposited thereon.\u201d In the Armenti case the plaintiff was one of a \u201cconcrete gang\u201d whose duty it was to prepare and lay concrete to build a large sewer; the \u201ccarpenter gang\u201d built the supports for the excavation. The court found that the supports were installed negligently and did not provide proper protection to the employee. This is hardly comparable to the instant case where a drop manhole (12 feet by 7 feet) was being excavated and no supports were used.\nPlaintiffs then ask that we consider the present New York Labor Law section 240 which provides that employers or others who direct the performance of labor on structures \u201cshall furnish or erect, or cause to be furnished or erected\u201d scaffolds and other devices to properly protect the person employed or directed. Section 60 of the Illinois Structural Work Act only provides for protection when a scaffold or other contrivance is \u201cerected or constructed.\u201d We cannot consider the mandatory requisites of the New York law in construing the provisions of the Illinois statute which apply only when a scaffold is used.\nLet us examine the Illinois Structural Work Act as it applies to the facts of the instant case.\nSection 60 defines the standards for mechanical contrivances that are \u201cerected or constructed\u201d for use in activities encompassed by the Act. It does not prescribe standards to determine when such contrivances must be used. This is illustrated by the language: (1) \u201cAll scaffolds ... or other mechanical contrivances erected or constructed . . .\u201d and (2) the requirement that a safety rail for a scaffold \u201cswung or suspended from an overhead support. . . .\u201d (Emphasis supplied.) In the instant case there was no scaffold, support or other mechanical contrivance. Even if the excavated hole was considered a \u201cstructure\u201d within the meaning of the Structural Work Act, there was no violation of any' of the protective measures provided for in the statute.\nFrom section 60 of the statute it would appear that its purpose is to give protection to persons employed on scaffolds or mechanical contrivances or passing under or by the same. The purpose may also be gleaned from other sections. Section 64 pertains to scaffolds on special types of structures such as water pipes, tanks and chimneys; it sets out requirements for a support or other suitable device below a scaffold to prevent-injuries in the case of accidents to the working scaffold. The language of that section does not require that scaffolding be used on these projects ; it merely requires that a safe subscaffolding be used if scaffolding in fact is utilized. Section 65 relates to flooring and beams and section 66 to elevating machines.\nIn construing section 60, we are assisted by the reasoning in Thon v. Johnson, 30 Ill App2d 317, 174 NE2d 400, in which the court held that a cement form upon which plaintiff stood was not a scaffold within the meaning of the statute. The court reasoned:\nWe are aware of the rule that our statute should be liberally construed, but if the statute were construed so as to cover the concrete form involved in this case, such a construction of the statute would be equivalent to holding that each and every place where a workman chooses to stand thereby becomes a scaffold within the meaning of the statute.\nIf \u201cstructure\u201d is broadened to include an excavation, such interpretation would be tantamount to holding that any place at which a person worked became a \u201cstructure.\u201d This is not the intention of the Act. We realize that the Act was designed to deal with highly dangerous activities; that the purpose was to prevent injuries to persons employed in extra-hazardous occupations; and that the Act should be liberally construed in an attempt to effectuate the statutory purpose, Gannon v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. Ry. Co., 22 Ill2d 305, 175 NE2d 785; Thon, supra. However, we find that the Structural Work Act does not \u201crequire\u201d supports or stays to be used in excavation work as claimed by plain tiffs; that a drop manhole is not a \u201cstructure\u201d within the Act; and that the accident was not caused by the insufficiency of a \u201cscaffold, support or stay\u201d because none was used.\nIn view of onr decision it is unnecessary to discuss the alternative arguments advanced by defendant.\nPlaintiffs have filed several motions which were taken with the case. They relate to the sufficiency of the abstract and the procedural sufficiency of perfecting this appeal. Specifically, plaintiffs contend that defendant did not appeal from a judgment pronounced and rendered in open court, and that the order appealed from was nonexistent. However, the abstract contains a written judgment order entered by the trial court, allegedly one day after it was rendered orally. The fact that the notice of appeal referred to the date that the post-trial motion was denied instead of the date of the judgment is merely an error of form.\nPlaintiffs\u2019 third motion raises five alleged defects. Three of these relate to the notice of appeal. Plaintiffs contend that the notice of appeal was not filed or served and that the proof of service of the notice of appeal was never filed.\nOn April 15, 1963, defendant filed a paper designated \u201cNotice of Piling Notice of Appeal\u201d and attached to it were two other papers: \u201cNotice of Appeal, from the Order of March 27, 1963, Overruling Defendant-Appellant\u2019s Post-Trial Motions\u201d and \u201cAffidavit of Service of the Notice of Piling Notice of Appeal.\u201d The trial court time-stamped \u201cPiled\u201d the notice of filing of notice of appeal but not the two attached papers. In Selvaggio v. Kickert School Bus Line, Inc., 46 Ill App2d 398, at 403, 197 NE2d 128, it was held that \u201cThe court record imports verity and that applies to dates of entry as well as in other aspects.\u201d The affidavit of plaintiffs\u2019 attorney confirms the verity of the record as it acknowledged the receipt of the notice of filing the notice of appeal and it did not deny that the notice of appeal was attached thereto. Moreover, the plaintiffs furnished, with, their motion, a certified copy of the notice of filing the notice of appeal and attached papers.\nPlaintiffs further contend that the service of the notice of appeal and proof of such service could not he made until after the notice of appeal was actually filed. In Schornick v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 277 Ill App 36, 39, the court rejected the contention that a receipted copy of a notice of appeal and the actual notice of appeal filed together constituted a failure to comply with the proof of notice filing requirements of the Civil Practice Act.\nPlaintiffs also contend that their second attorney was not served with any papers relating to the appeal. Defendant admits this. However, Supreme Court Rule 34(2) (Ill Rev Stats 1959, c 110, \u00a7101.34(2)) states that \u201cService of notice upon 1 of 2 or more partners is sufficient.\u201d\nFinally, plaintiffs argue that the post-trial motion was not filed, presented and ruled upon within the 30 day period prescribed by section 68.3 of the Civil Practice Act. (Ill Rev Stats 1959, c 110, \u00a7 68.3.) However, this requirement refers only to the filing of such motion within 30 days of the entry of judgment. Plaintiffs submit, in their affidavit, that the motion was filed within that 30 day period.\nThe motions are denied for the reasons set out above and because they raise mere technicalities and seek to avoid a decision on the merits. In Foman v. Davis, 371 US 178, at 181, the court said:\nThe defect in the second notice of appeal did not mislead or prejudice the respondent. With both notices of appeal before it (even granting the asserted ineffectiveness of the first), the Court of Appeals should have treated the appeal from the denial of the motions as an effective, although inept, attempt to appeal from the judgment sought to he vacated. Taking the two notices and the appeal papers together, petitioner\u2019s intention to seek review of both the dismissal and denial of the motions was manifest. Not only did both parties brief and argue the merits of the earlier judgment on appeal, but petitioner\u2019s statement of points on which she intended to rely on appeal, submitted to both respondent and the court pursuant to rule, similarly demonstrated the intent to challenge the dismissal.\nIt is too late in the day and entirely contrary to the spirit of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for decisions on the merits to be avoided on the basis of such mere technicalities.\nThe judgment in favor of plaintiffs is reversed and judgment is entered in favor of defendant.\nReversed.\nMcCORMICK, P. J. and ENGLISH, J., concur.\nPlaintiffs\u2019 witness, James Morris, testified that a drop manhole is \u201ca shaft, a box shaft into the tunnel. It was supposed to be about 18' deep and 12' x 7' wide.\u201d\nAt the end of the trial Odessa disclosed that she had been married to James Thompson, one of plaintiffs\u2019 chief witnesses, for almost a year before she commenced this suit.\nTbe sewer was built of concrete, was nearly circnlar in form, about 17 feet in diameter, and was laid at tbe bottom of an open trencb about 18 feet wide and about 45 feet deep. On tbe day of tbe accident about 135 feet of tbis trencb was open. Tbe sewer bad been constructed in two sections, and tbe lower balf or invert of tbe sewer at tbe bottom of tbe trencb bad been completed. Tbis invert was at least 7 feet in beigbt from tbe bottom of tbe excavation, and extended tbe entire width thereof between tbe sheathing on either side, Armenti, p 422.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "MR. JUSTICE DRUCKER"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Lord, Bissell & Brook, of Chicago (Newell S. Board-man, Jay M. Smyser, and William P. Butler, of counsel), for appellant.",
      "Thaddeus B. Rowe and W. Elbert Washington, of Chicago, for appellees."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Woodrow Bradley, a/k/a Woodrow Green, Jr., and Douglas Bradley, a/k/a Douglas Green, by Odessa Bradley, Their Mother and Next Friend, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Appellant.\nGen. No. 49,270.\nFirst District, Fourth Division.\nMarch 3, 1965.\nLord, Bissell & Brook, of Chicago (Newell S. Board-man, Jay M. Smyser, and William P. Butler, of counsel), for appellant.\nThaddeus B. Rowe and W. Elbert Washington, of Chicago, for appellees."
  },
  "file_name": "0482-01",
  "first_page_order": 494,
  "last_page_order": 502
}
