Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Buckmaster

74 Ill. App. 575, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 270
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 Ill. App. 575 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Buckmaster) 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 Railroad v. Buckmaster, 74 Ill. App. 575, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 270 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Worthington

delivered the opinion of the Court.

If entitled to recover, the amount is not contested. Appellant denies any right of recovery, and while assigning divers errors on the record, presents four only- in his brief, which Ave notice in their order:

First. Appellee Avas not injured as alleged in the declaration. No objection for variance was made in the trial court. It is too late to raise the question here for the first time. Swift & Co. v. Madden, 165 Ill. 41; Cozzens v. Chicago H. P. Brick Co., 166 Ill. 213.

In fact, there is no substantial variance. The declaration aArers that it was the duty of defendant to provide plaintiff Avith a safe passage, and to keep the train in such condition that the plaintiff might leave the same Avith safety upon its arrival at Alton; that defendant negligently suffered the passage way to become obstructed by a valise, satchel, or hand-bag; and that Avhile plaintiff, Avith all due care, Avas in the act of leaving the train at Alton, she struck against said obstruction and Avas thereby throAvn Avith great force and violence upon the floor of the car, by means Avhereof her leg was broken, etc.

Defendant pleaded not guilty.

While there is some conflict in the testimony as to what caused appellee to trip and fall, we think the evidence Avarranted the jury in finding that it was caused by the valise. The declaration avers that it obstructed the passage Avay. It was not necessary for it to completely block up the aisle in order to obstruct it. The evidence shoAvs that the valise Avas about eighteen inches long and eleven inches Avide, Avhile the aisle Avas from íavo and one-half to three feet Avide. The bralceman, appellant’s witness and ser\Tant, testified that it took up about one-third of the aisle. The conductor testified, any obstruction in the aisle a person stumbles over might cause them to fall.” Stimson, a passenger, testified that he had stumbled over the same valise when coming into the-car.

There, is then no variance on this point between the proof and the declaration. The second and third- points made by appellant, and which we will consider together, are, in substance, that as it had been the custom of passengers to place their small valises in the aisles, and appellee, having traveled extensively, knew such to be the case, that the company was guilty of no negligence in allowing the valise to remain in the aisle, and that, knowing of sucn custom, appellee was guilty of contributory negligence in not looking to see if valises were in the aisle. An unanswerable objection to this defense is that it is not sustained by the evidence. “ Small ” and “large” are relative terms. A valise may be “ small ” in relation to a closet or baggage room in which it stands, and “large” in relation to a passage which it obstructs. When it takes up one-third of a narrow aisle in a passenger car it is not “ small ” in comparison with the width of the aisle.

The testimony is that this valise was too large to be placed in the rack, and so large that it had to be removed to allow three persons to occupy the seats facing together.

The testimony, too, fails to prove that it is the custom of passengers to place- their grips or valises in the aisle. A custom, in ordinary language, is defined to be “ an habitual or common use; a regular habit.”

Conductor Foley was asked by appellant:

Q. Now, what is the ordinary or usual habit about putting valises in the aisle of the car ?

A. Well, as a general thing, they put them up against the side of the seat in the aisle.

In cross examination :

Q. Suppose a man didn’t see a satchel ten inches wide in the aisle wouldn’t he stumble over it ?

A. If on the side of the aisle he was on, yes, sir. I mean to say he could get by if he saw it. I say it is usual for passengers to put their satchels in the aisle, and if they are nob too large and take up too much room we leave them there. If we possibly can, we try to see that the aisle is Tcept clear.

Tomlinson, the brakeman, testified in chief: “ The passengers are liable to put their valises or carpet bags almost anywhere in the train. • They put them in the aisle usually.” On cross:examination he testified : “I say passengers occasionally put their satchels in the aisles. It is part of our duty to see that the aisle is kept clear. With this satchel standing in the aisle there would' be left about two feet for a passenger to pass in the aisle.”

Oust, for appellant, was asked:

Q. I want to ask you if the practice of putting bags and valises in the end of the seats, precisely as you had placed them, is not almost universal on all trains over the country?

A. Yes, sir, and it is that sort of thing, and the damnable nuisance of having many things in the aisle that ought not to be there that had made me careful what I put there; I have stumbled over big bags and other big eases in the aisles.

Maj. McLaughrey, for appellant, •testified--: -

Q. What is the ordinary or usual habit of the traveling community about placing their valises ?

A. I think the usual ha,bit is to dispose of them in the seat, but very, frequently they are placed in the aisle.

Miss Buckmaster, appellee, testified:

“ I was unaccustomed to seeing bags in the car, as a general thing, in the aisle. It was not a frequent occurrence.”

This evidence not only fails to prove that appellee knew of any such custom, but fails to prove the existence of such a custom.

Appellee, according to her- testimony, was sitting directly back of the seat at whose end in the aisle the valise was placed. It was a high-backed seat. She placed one hand on the back of the seat, stepped with her left foot in the aisle, and as she stepped with her right foot, struck the valise and fell. If she had been looking forward, as one naturally would look in passing out of a train, the valise would not have been within the range of her vision, as it was on the floor, at her feet, and in the way of the first step of her right foot, and at the end of a high-baclted seat. It had been there for two hours, and yet both the conductor and the brakeman testify that they had not seen it. Appellee rode only five miles, between Godfrey and Alton. If the employes whose duty it was to keep the aisle clear failed to see such an obstruction, although frequently passing through the car, the jury might well conclude that appellee, a woman in the hurry of leaving the car at a station, and having a right to presume that the aisle was kept clear, was not guilty of contributory negligence in failing to see it. They might well conclude, also, that a valise occupying one-third of the passage-way, and over which another passenger had stumbled, was an obstruction, and that defendant was negligent in permitting it to remain there for two hours.

Appellant’s fourth point is: “We also contend that the court failed to properly instruct the jury.” But one instruction was given for the plaintiff, which was as follows:

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74 Ill. App. 575, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-buckmaster-illappct-1898.