Bobby C. v. State

30 Ill. Ct. Cl. 32, 1974 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedJuly 29, 1974
DocketNos. 5137 and 5144
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 Ill. Ct. Cl. 32 (Bobby C. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobby C. v. State, 30 Ill. Ct. Cl. 32, 1974 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 505 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

Burks, J.

The three claimants in these consolidated claims seek damages for personal injuries allegedly caused by respondent’s negligence in failing to keep the weeds mowed on the shoulder of a highway; in allowing a concrete culvert on the shoulder to be obscured from view by weeds growing up around it; and in failing to provide any warning of this alleged dangerous condition.

All three claimants were injured in the same accident. They were riding in the front seat of a car, owned and driven by Bobby Clark, when the right front tire blew out. The car, after pulling off the paved highway onto the shoulder, struck the foot high concrete culvert, which claimants contend was unmarked and covered by weeds.

Sitting next to the driver, Bobby Clark, was his wife, Mary, and to her right was Mary’s sister, Della Clark. About midday on July 17, 1963, they were driving north on Route 148, a 2-lane paved highway with wide shoulders. When they were about a mile and a half south of Christopher, traveling at a speed of 55 to 60 MPH, the right front tire blew out. It made a loud noise like a gun going off. The driver, Bobby, said he "slowed down gradually, put on the brake and dropped the car off the pavement onto the shoulder”. The shoulder was over 8 feet wide, fairly level with the roadway, and Bobby said he didn’t see anything but high grass on the shoulder. He was still traveling at a speed of 40 MPH when he hit the culvert, which was approximately 250 feet from the point of the blowout.

Bobby, the driver, said he did not see the culvert, because of the weeds, until he was about a car’s length from it and, at that point, he was not able to turn his car in any manner to avoid it.

The concrete culvert, running parallel to the highway, was 10 feet long, 7 inches wide, and one foot high at the end struck by claimant’s car. The culvert was set back 8 feet 5 inches from the edge of the pavement on the outer edge of the shoulder, a set-back distance of nearly 3 feet more than the width of a passenger car. Bobby said his car, a ’59 Buick, struck the culvert headwall about a foot inside the right front wheel. This means that the right side of claimants’ car was about 10 feet off the edge of the pavement, and the left side about 4 feet off the pavement. The car struck the headwall with such force, that it ended up "straddle the culvert”. The car was a total wreck, and all three passengers suffered personal injuries.

The position of claimants’ car at impact indicates that it narrowly missed running off the shoulder and plunging into a drainage ditch which runs parallel to the shoulder and culvert. The ditch is plainly visible in claimants’ photo exhibits. The accident occurred in bright daylight, about noon, on a warm, clear, dry day.

Respondent contends that the proximate cause of this accident was the apparent failure of the driver, Bobby Clark, to keep his car under control after the tire blew out. Respondent also denies that anything it did, nor failed to do, contributed in any way to the accident.

The court finds that the preponderance of the evidence supports the respondent’s position on both issues.

First, we find that the weight of the evidence fails to confirm claimants’ major premise that the culvert was obscured from view by high grass and weeds. All of claimants’ photo exhibits show the headwall of the culvert to be plainly visible from a reasonable distance. There is some uncertainty in the record as to exactly when the photos were taken and as to whether the photos show the condition of the culvert substantially the same as it appeared at the time of the accident. Testimony of claimants’ witnesses is conflicting on this point. It is certain that the pictures were taken a day or more after the accident and before the grass was cut around the culvert.

Claimants introduced eight photo exhibits showing the culvert, the grass, and the weeds as claimants viewed the area from their approach. Claimant, Bobby Clark said that two of the pictures were taken by him and the other six were taken by his brother several days later. When counsel for the claimants showed Bobby the photos marked as claimants’ exhibits A-l through A-8, we find the following questions and answers in the record:

Q Do those photographs correctly show the condition of the culvert, and the surrounding area at the time of the accident?
A [Bobby Clark] Yes sir.
Q Is the condition of the grass and the weeds, as shown in that picture, as it was on the occasion of the accident?
A [Bobby Clark] I think they’d mowed the right-of-way off, but the culvert still hadn’t been cleaned up at the time these pictures were taken.

The court, examining the same photos, and accepting Bobby Clark’s testimony that the culvert had not been cleaned up when the photos were taken, finds that the culvert was clearly visible at the time of the accident. It was certainly not hidden by the weeds at the end facing claimants’ on-coming car. The entire 10 feet top is also visible. Although the photos show the weeds are as high as the culvert in the middle facing the highway, where the culvert is only 7 inches high, this is not the portion claimants would have seen when approaching the culvert on the shoulder. Claimants’ car struck the south end of the 12 inch high culvert which claimants’ photos show was plainly visible from a reasonable distance. Bobby Clark, the driver, said these photos "correctly show the condition of the culvert at the time of the accident”. We emphasize that this statement, corroborated by several of claimants’ witnesses, and accepted by the court, is factual, totally contradicts claimants’ main contention that their view of the culvert was obscured by weeds until they were just a car’s length from it.

We have carefully considered the testimony of claimants’ seven witnesses, who viewed the culvert after the accident, and find a profusion of contradictions as to what they saw. All of them saw high grass and weeds around the culvert. Raymond Marks, Lester Simpson, and Grover Whiteside said that the culvert was completely concealed by the weeds. Others agreed with Bobby Clark’s statement that claimants’ photos correctly show the condition of the culvert at the time of the accident.

Three of claimants’ witnesses, Bill Marks, Robert Gene Lindsay, and George Linsley, friends of the Clarks, after visiting Bobby, Mary, and Della in the Miners Hospital in Christopher, went out to view the scene of the accident. These witnesses went there about midnight after the accident had occurred about noon that day. They had a flashlight when they viewed the culvert. Bill Marks was asked the following question and gave the following answer:

Q I show you petitioner’s exhibits A-l to A-8, being the photographs of the culvert, and ask you if the weed condition shown there is the same as you saw it that night?
A [Bill Marks] Well, pretty much the same.

George Linsley seemed to contradict the above statement by his testimony that you couldn’t see the culvert unless you were "right on it”. Then, on cross examination, he gave the following answers:

Q How far back could you see the culvert?

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Related

Lovsey v. State
48 Ill. Ct. Cl. 73 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1995)
Duprey v. State
47 Ill. Ct. Cl. 280 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1994)
Trotter v. State
45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 164 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1993)
Baker v. State
42 Ill. Ct. Cl. 110 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1989)
Allen v. State
36 Ill. Ct. Cl. 242 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1984)
Gramlich v. State
35 Ill. Ct. Cl. 19 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ill. Ct. Cl. 32, 1974 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobby-c-v-state-ilclaimsct-1974.