Chicago & Alton R. R. v. Vipond

101 Ill. App. 607, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 459
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 101 Ill. App. 607 (Chicago & Alton R. R. v. Vipond) 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 & Alton R. R. v. Vipond, 101 Ill. App. 607, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 459 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The branch of the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company’s lines running from Peoria to Dwight, and the main line of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company cross each other in the City of Streator. For convenience those roads will hereinafter be called the Alton and the Santa Fe, respectively. A short distance southwesterly from the Alton, and parallel with it, another railroad, called “ The Three I,” crosses the Santa Fe. The general direction of the Alton and Three I roads at the crossing is northwest and southeast, and of the Santa Fe northeast and southwest. About 1:40 a. m. of December 27,1899, a switch engine of the Santa Fe, running backward and hauling several freight cars, came to said crossing from the northeast, and ran into the side of an Alton passenger train then going over the crossing in a southeasterly direction. The tender, which was ahead of the Santa Fe engine, was thrown from the track and carried to the southeast, and two cars of the Alton train were overturned. Henry Dirkes was fireman on the Santa Fe engine. He sustained various injuries in the collision, which resulted in his death thirteen days later. This is a suit brought by the administrator of his estate to recover from the Alton road, for the benefit of the widow and child of said Henry Dirkes, the loss to their means of support. Defendant pleaded not guilty. Hpon a trial plaintiff had a verdict and a judgment for $5,000 and defendant appeals.

The declaration contained three counts. The court instructed the jury to find for defendant under the second and third counts. The verdict, therefore, is based solely upon the first count. That count charged, among other things, that the Santa Fe engine and cars in question were under the care and management of divers servants of the Santa Fe company, including Dirkes, who were then driving the same toward the crossing of said two roads; that there bad been erected at said crossing and was then in use by said railroad companies a semaphore, then under the care of and operated by the servants of said companies, which semaphore was used to indicate to those in charge of locomotives and trains of cars on either of said roads whether or not it was safe to pass over said crossing, the semaphore being composed of red and white lights, white indicating safety, and red indicating danger, so that when the red light was displayed on the track of the Alton road it was the duty of its servants, running and operating locomotives and trains of cars, to stop and not pass over said crossing till the white light was displayed. The count further averred that while said Santa Fe locomotive and train, with Dirkes, fireman on said locomotive, were moving toward said crossing on the night in question, said semaphore showed a white light on said Santa Fe road, indicating said locomotive and train of cars had the right of way and could cross in safety, and at the same time showed a’ red light on the Alton road, indicating danger, and making it the duty of the servants of the Alton driving its locomotive and train toward said crossing, to stop and not to attempt to drive said locomotive and train over said crossing till a white light was shown; that said servants of the Alton carelessly and improperly drove its locomotive and train over said crossing while said red light indicated to them it was dangerous to cross, and without stopping, as was their duty, and thereby the two trains came in collision and Dirkes was injured, and thei’eafter died of said injuries. It was also averred Dirkes was exercising due care. There were proper averments as to the widow and child and the granting of letters of administration to plaintiff.

The only negligence charged against defendant by the first count was that its servants ran its locomotive and train over said railroad crossing when a red light showed them it was dangerous to cross, and when by reason of said red light displayed to them it was their duty to stop and wait till a white light was shown. The proof showed that at the crossing of the Santa Fe and Alton there was a semaphore, and another at the crossing of the. Santa Fe and Three I, both on the southeast side of the Santa Fe track, and both operated by the same lever some distance northeast of the Alton track along the Santa Fe track, the lever conveying the desired movement to the arms of the semaphores by means of two wires. The semaphore was always kept set to show a clear track for the Santa Fe, and to show danger to each of the other roads, except where a locomotive or train of either the Alton or Three I desired to cross the Santa Fe, and then a danger signal was shown to the Santa Fe, and the signal for a clear track to the other roads. At night the danger signal was a red light, and a white light was a signal for a clear track and the right of way. The lights in the semaphore at night were white. The red light was obtained by dropping in front of one of the white lights a red glass placed in an arm of the semaphore. "Witnesses testified the semaphore was so constructed that both white lights could not be shown at the same time, if the semaphore was in proper repair. If, however, the red glass was broken, or had fallen out, then the semaphore would show a white light to both roads. It was also in proof that when the arm was half way over it would show to each road a light half red and half white.

The plaintiff proved by numerous witnesses that at and just before the collision both semaphores showed a wdiite light to the Santa Fe. The person whose duty it was to change the signals when required, testified he had not changed the signals for at least thirty minutes. Another witness for plaintiff testified to the best of his recollection the signals had not been changed for thirty minutes. No proof was introduced that at the time of and just before the accident the semaphore showed a red light to the Alton, except the inference to be draivn from the fact that the semaphore was so constructed that if in due repair, and with the red glass in place, it must show a red light to the Alton when it displayed a white light to the Santa Fe. When the tender was thrown off the track to the southeast by the collision, it was thrown against and knocked down the semaphore, and that was dragged some distance. It was proved by plaintiff that after the collision it could still be seen that the semaphore had shown a white light toward the Santa Fe, but no effort was made to show what the condition then was of the part of the semaphore which, when in place, was turned toward the Alton. Plaintiff relied solely upon the testimony that the semaphore when in order could not show a white light to the Alton when it showed a white light to the Santa Fe, and upon the unquestioned proof that at the time of the collision it did show a white light to the Santa Fe.

The Alton passenger depot was about a block and a half from the crossing, and the track from the depot to the crossing was straight. The passenger train in question was on time, and its time was known to the man in charge of the semaphore lever, and to the man running the Santa Fe switch engine. The passenger train stopped at the depot about four minutes to discharge and take on passengers and baggage. The engineer of the passenger train testified that while at the depot he noticed the lights at the semaphore and'they were white and that he continued to see them white until about the instant of the wreck. He testified no red light was shown to his train that night.

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Related

Latrobe Steel & Coupler Co. v. Shlones
129 Ill. App. 215 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)
Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Vipond
112 Ill. App. 558 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
101 Ill. App. 607, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-r-r-v-vipond-illappct-1902.