Baker v. Illinois Central Railroad

161 Ill. App. 521, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 784
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 26, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 161 Ill. App. 521 (Baker v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Baker v. Illinois Central Railroad, 161 Ill. App. 521, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 784 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was originally instituted against the Illinois Central Bailroad Company and the Vandalia Bailroad Company. A trial of the issues by jury resulted in a verdict of guilty as to the former company and of not guilty as' to the latter. Judgment for the sum of $8,000 was rendered against the Illinois Central Bailroad Company in accordance with the verdict.

The declaration charges, in substance, the operation by the Vandalia Bailroad Company in the city of Effingham, of a railroad, switches and “Y” tracks, and of a passing track by the Illinois Central Bailroad Company; that the plaintiff’s intestate, William A. Baker, was employed by the Vandalia as a yard switchman, and as a member of a switching crew moved and delivered cars for the Vandalia, from its tracks to and upon the passing track of the Illinois Central, by the request and consent of the latter company; that defendants negligently permitted one side of the passing track of the Illinois Central to be and remain out of repair, with a low and sunken joint at and in a rail thereof, and the rails to become separated from the tie there and to be unnecessarily dangerous to Baker in his work aforesaid; that fhe defendants knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care ought to have known of the disrepair and danger in time to have made it reasonably safe; that Baker did not know of the disrepair and danger and had no reasonable opportunity to discover it; and that while he was, in the usual line of his duty in that regard, standing upon the front foot-board of the Vandalia switch engine delivering cars from the Vandalia to the Illinois Central, upon the passing track of the Illinois Central, and in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, without warning or notice to him the switch engine suddenly tipped into the low and sunken place in the said passing track, and thereby with great violence he was thrown to the track and injured, and died from the injuries.

The evidence discloses the following facts: The Illinois Central runs north and south, and the Vandalia east and west, through the city of Effingham. Their joint depot is located on the east side of the Illinois Central and on the north side of the Vandalia. The two railroads are connected with a “Y” starting on the Vandalia at a point west of the junction of the two roads, and connecting with the Illinois Central at a point north of said junction. The Vandalia had its shops and switch-yards at Effingham and there maintained switch engines and crews in charge of the same. It had been the custom of each of the companies to deliver cars received by it, to the other, by means of the “Y” track. There is no proof of any specific agreement between the • companies relative to the delivery of such cars, but in view of the fact that the Vandalia maintained a switch engine at that point, it had been the practice for the Illinois Central to deliver cars received by it for the Vandalia on the “Y”, which cars were then taken by the switch engine of the Vandalia. The Vandalia having a switch engine, not only placed the cars that it received for the Illinois Central, on the “Y”, but also delivered them to the latter company by placing them on the passing track. At the point where the “Y” connected with the Illinois Central tracks, it maintained five tracks, the east one of which was known as the north-bound track, the next to the west the south-bound track, the next the passing track, and then two other tracks. The “Y” connected with the passing track, and from that track the Vandalia switch engine, in delivering cars, could enter the house track at either the north or south end. The passing track was used merely for the passing of freight trains. The north entrance to the house track was north and the south entrance south of Eailroad avenue, which ran east and west some distance north of the junction of the two roads.

Plaintiff’s intestate, William A. Baker, had for five years prior to his death, been in the employ of the Vandalia as a switch foreman in its yards at Effing-ham. He had charge of the switch engine used in the making up of trains in the Vandalia yards, and in delivering cars from the Vandalia to the Illinois Central, the crew of which were under his direction. The switch engine in use on March 9, 1909, had three pairs of drive-wheels, but there were no small wheels in front of the drivers. At the back and front of the engine were foot-boards, ten inches in width, used by the crew in getting off and on the engines. That on the front did not run clear across, because of the coupling device, but continued on either side thereof. The clear space between the top of the rail and the bottom of the front foot-board was one and seven-eighths inches. East of the coupling device the front foot-board slanted downward so that the front thereof was at least an inch lower than the back.

During the afternoon of March 9, 1909, Baker and the crew, of which he was foreman, started to deliver a mail car and a refrigerator car which were on the “Y” to the Illinois Central, using the switch engine referred to. The engine was headed to the north when it reached the Illinois Central tracks, with the cars in the rear. Baker stood on the east front hoard and another switchman on the west front board. "While the .engine was running at about six miles an hour the front foot-board struck the crossing at Railroad avenue. Baker was thrown from the fqpt-board, caught under the same, and dragged for some distance. The evidence shows that the foot-board upon which he was standing was at the time bent under so that it was at an angle of forty-five degrees pointing south. The evidence further shows that on that morning Baker had complained to the foreman of the Vandalia shop that the foot-board in question was too low, and stated that some one was going to get hurt on it, and that he had told others prior thereto that it had scraped at the crossing in question, and that on one occasion he “come very near getting throwed off” at such crossing; that immediately after the accident, while he was lying on the ground he told several members of his crew that he “knew this very thing would happen;” that the lowness of the foot-board was the cause of his injury, and “that it happened just as he expected it to happen and that he was the one who had to suffer.”

The evidence further shows that immediately south of the crossing in question, one of the ties was lower than the other, and that engines in passing over such tie depressed it at the point where the rails met, thereby creating what was known as a low joint. The defendant offered to show on the trial that the front foot-board in question was too low; that the standard height was not less than seven and a half inches above the rail; that it was unsafe to have the foot-board any lower; that the height adopted by the Vandalia railroad was the standard height; that other switch engines on the Vandalia had foot-boards from eight and a half to ten and a half inches high, and that the foot-boards on the switch engines of the defendant were from eight to ten inches high; and to further show that foot-hoards upon engines used by well-conducted, first-class railroad companies were not lower than seven and a half inches. The court refused to admit such evidence, and in ruling upon the same made the following statement in the presence of the jury: ‘ ‘ The Illinois Central and Vandalia use this track together. No Illinois Central switch engine there.

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Bluebook (online)
161 Ill. App. 521, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-illinois-central-railroad-illappct-1911.