Chicago & A. R. R. v. Hardie

85 Ill. App. 122, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 876
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 12, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 85 Ill. App. 122 (Chicago & A. R. R. v. Hardie) 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
Chicago & A. R. R. v. Hardie, 85 Ill. App. 122, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 876 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit instituted by appellee against appellant and the Streator Railway Company, to recover damages. suffered by her by reason of the death of her husband, Thomas Hardie, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant and said Streator Railway Company.

In the summer of 1895, the Streator Railway Company was operating an electric street railway system in Streator, a city of ten to fifteen thousand inhabitants. One of their tracks extended along Hickory street, which runs east and west, and is one of the most traveled streets in the city. The cars running upon said street railway were each operated by one man, who acted both as motorman and conductor. By the rules of the company this motorman was permitted, where the street "car track was straight, to go back into the car and collect the fare from the -passengers while his car was running, but if the place where the car was then running was at all dangerous he was required to stop his car before proceeding to collect fares. The rules of the company also required that in approaching a railroad crossing the motorman should bring his car to a full stop, at least twenty feet before the crossing, and should not then proceed until he had ascertained that it was safe for him to cross. The street car tracks crossed the line of three different railroads in the city. At the same time appellant operated a steam railroad passing though the city of Streator. In going through the city, appellant crosses Hickory street with three tracks—a main track, a passing track and a switch track—the main track being north of the other two. Appellant’s tracks cross Hickory street at an angle running from the southeast to the northwest, and the main track preserves this same course for some distance on either side of said street. Everett street, running north and south, crosses Hickory street at right angles just west of the point where the former street is crossed by appellant’s tracks, so that the railroad tracks pass almost immediately from Hickory street to Everett street. Wason street is the next street west, and parallel to Everett street, and appellant’s depot is located on the north side of its main track, about midway between Everett street and Wason street. The depot platform is raised about two feet above the rail of the track, and extends from a point northwest of the depot down the track, in a southeasterly direction to the sidewalk, running north and south on the west side of Everett street.

On the 8th day of July, and for some time prior thereto, appellant ran a regular local freight train, which also carried a car for the accommodation of passengers, from Dwight to Washington, in this State, passing through Streator on each week day. The crew of this train was accustomed, after the arrival of the train, to do what switching ivork there was to be done at the Streator station. On the morning of said day, this train carried for the accommodation of passengers, an old passenger coach or combination car, the space in front being partitioned off for baggage and express matter and the remainder of the car provided with seats for passengers in the manner of an ordinary passenger coach. The train arrived at Streator at about 8:40 a. m., where it remained something over two hours, while the train crew was doing the necessary switching. During this time an engine and crew of the O., B. & Q. B. B. Co. switched six coal cars from the tracks of the latter road onto appellant’s main track, for the purpose of being delivered by appellant to the Acme coal shaft, situated about half a mile southeast of appellant’s depot. When appellant’s engine and train crew had finished the switching work, the engine, with two freight cars which had been uncoupled with the engine from the train when it arrived, and were still coupled together, backed upon the main track and were coupled to the six coal cars. The engine and the eight cars attached to it were then backed further down the main track and coupled onto the cars standing there. The train then started to back down the track toward the southeast to the coal shaft, to set out the coal cars. As the train started back, a street car was coming west on Hickory street toward' the crossing, on Avhich were one Mallory, the motorman and conductor, and three passengers, one of whom was Thomas Hardie, appellee’s intestate. The car .was running at its usual speed, and Mallory, the motorman, was in the body of the car, standing with his back toward the railroad crossing, apparently collecting the fares from the passengers. When the street car was discovered approaching, the conductor of appellant’s train, and several passengers, endeavored to attract Mallory’s attention to his danger by shouting to him, and the conductor also signaled the engineer to stop. The engineer, however, did not bring the train to a stop until the passenger car, or the larger part of it, had run over the street car track. The motorman did not catch the warning given him until his car had reached a point within tAventy-five or thirty feet of appellant’s track, when he hurried to the front platform of his car and grasped the brake handle and power lever, but was unable to stop the car in time to avoid a collision. By reason of the collision, said Hardie was thrown from the car in, which he was riding and received injuries which shortly afterward resulted in his death. Appellee, having been appointed administratrix of her husband’s estate, brought this suit. After all the evidence was in, appellee dismissed her suit as to the Streator Bailway Company, and the jury returned a verdict against appellant for the sum of $5,000, and a motion for a new trial having been overruled, the court entered judgment for the amount of the verdict.

It is claimed by appellant that the verdict in this case was not sustained by the evidence, and the argument of counsel on both sides is mainly directed to that question. That the motorman of the street car company was guilty of the most inexcusable negligence was not questioned on the trial. Appellant, however, insists that it was not guilty of the negligence charged to it in the declaration, and that, even if it were so guilty, such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury complained of. It can not be questioned that appellant had the right to move its cars up and down the track, across Hickory street, using due care to avoid accident, but appellee claims that the passenger car, with one car attached to it, had been detached from the train soon after its arrival, and left standing immediately north of Hickory street, during the time the switching was being done, and that when the engine and cars attached to it were backed down to couple onto them, the passenger car and the freight car attached to it were “kicked ” violently and rapidly back over the crossing, causing the collision. It therefore becomes important to know the condition of the train after it arrived in Streator, up to the time of the collision.

Appellee introduced witnesses Harvey and JDonaghue, who testified that they passed the railroad crossing on Hickory street twice that morning and noticed the caboose, or passenger car, standing close to the sidewalk on the north line of Hickory street, the latter witness stating that he thought there was one freight car attached to it; also the witnesses, Fred Schlageter, who was in his office in his planing mill, some 150 feet away, and Philip Schlageter, who was unloading lumber near by, both of whom testified to a similar state of facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Ill. App. 122, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-a-r-r-v-hardie-illappct-1899.