Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Fisher

31 Ill. App. 36, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 354
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ill. App. 36 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Fisher) 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. Fisher, 31 Ill. App. 36, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 354 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Wall, P. J.

The appellee recovered a judgment against the appellant in an action on the case, in the sum of five thousand dollars.

The declaration contained three counts. The first alleged that on the 18th of August, 1886, the defendant ran an excursion train between Petersburg and Ashland, and plaintiff became a passenger thereon; that on the return journey defendant negligently permitted the train to become overcrowded, and by reason thereof the plaintiff, while exercising due care, was, by the pressure of the persons on the platform and steps of the car, unavoidably crowded off and thereby injured. The second count substantially states the same condition of the car, and alleges that by reason thereof plaintiff was unable to stand on the platform, and unavoidably fell off and was thrown against a heavy truck, etc.

The third avers the defendant had notice that an unusual number of persons would take the train, and advertised it would carry all persons at reduced rates; that plaintiff became a passenger, that defendant failed to provide adequate room for the passengers, and suffered the train to be overcrowded, and also carelessly permitted a heavy truck to be on the depot platform at Petersburg, directly in the way of persons who might alight from the train, and that by reason of the overloaded condition of the train, the plaintiff, while exercising due care, was thrown from the car and was dragged against the said truck, whereby he was injured.

The occasion was a soldiers’ reunion at Ashland, which is the second station south of Petersburg. The defendant sold excursion tickets from the latter to the former station and return, but it does not appear that extra cars were provided, and the passengers going from Petersburg to Asli'and were very much crowded.

On the return the crowd was groat, so much so that the platform and isles were filled on some, if not all the cars, except the sleeper and dining car. At Tallulla, a station between Ashland and Petersburg, about one hundred got off, and the train proceeded to Petersburg. The plaintiff made an effort at Ashland to get on the front end of a coach, probably the second from the baggage car, and finding that coach was filling rapidly, went forward and got on the front end of the smoker where, as he states, he remained, because lie could see no chance to get a seat inside. This platform was crowded, as was the platform of the baggage ear in front of him.

He sat on one of the steps a part of the time and stood a part of the time. As the train approached Petersburg he rose to his feet, holding with one hand to the railing of the ear and with the other to the railing of the car platform. He does not know, as he states, how he got off, but he was seen to be running along on the depot platform holding on to'the car until he struck against the truck, which was standing near the track with a trunk upon it, when he was thrown down and very seriously hurt. He was unconscious for several days, and though no bones were broken, he received injuries which confined him to his room for six weeks, and for which he had not fully recovered at the trial.

The train consisted of three pas-enger cars, besides the s’eeper and dining car. The three passenger cars were overcrowded, and though about one hundred persons alighted at Tallulla, there was on the forward car, where plaintiff rode, no apparent relief, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses, though, as to this, there is contradiction. The theory of plaintiff is, that as the train whistled for Petersburg there was a rush of persons to get out, and that he was thus pushed off. It is remarkable that no witness swears that lie was pushed off, the nearest approach to such proof being found in the testimony of McHenry, who swears that he was standing next to plaintiff, and that he felt a pressure from persons back of him, and (hat he was pressing somewhat against the plaintiff; that he felt plaintiff give way, and as he looked around, he saw plaintiff strike the truck. He did not see him as lie left the car, and he evidently does not know how he left, for lie did not look around until just as plaintiff struck the truck.

According to the great weight of the proof, and indeed according to all of it on the point, the plaintiff ran along the platform a considerable distance, not less than sixty feet, before he reached the truck.

Some of the witnesses described him as holding on to the car with both hands—though the most of them say with one, tiie right—he being on the west side of the car and going north.

It was manifestly incumbent upon the plaintiff to satisfy tiie jury that he was unavoidably forced from the car by reason of the overcrowded condition thereof, and it was perhaps tiie chief point of inquiry to ascertain whether he ic-ft the car of his own volition or by reason of the pressure from the crowd.

As already stated, bnt one witness, McHenry, testifies that there was any such pressure as might have forced him off, and that pressure was not sncli as to materially change the position of the witness himself.

All the other testimony is to the effect that lie voluntarily stepped off, or that the witnesses did not see him in the act of passing from the car, and they were nnab'e to say what induced his going. Some ten or twelve witnesses testify that he stepped off as any person would in alighting from a train, holding on with his right hand and placing his left foot on the depot platform ; and that he then ran along, holding- on, until he came to tiie truck. Other witnesses did not see him until he was off, running along.

One witness for the plaintiff, Kleinan, who was sitting in a bus on the other side of the depot, says he saw him come off backward, holding on with both hands to the railing, and going along in this mode, sideways, taking steps of ten or fifteen feet at a time until he reached the truck, but he is not well corroborated as. to the attitudes of plaintiff, and was probably in error as to this.

There was testimony to the effect that plaintiff said that he intended to get off ahead of the crowd, so that he could get into the bus and ride up town. Four or five persons so testified, and that after he had partially recovered he accounted for his misfortune in the same way, and admitted that he had acted incautiously in trying to get off while the train was in motion. He denies these statements and admissions, but the testimony comes in such a form as that it might ordinarily be expected to receive credit from the jury; though, of course, there is such contradiction, as that if the issue rested wholly on these statements and admissions, it would hardly do to say that the finding of the jury is without warrant.

Taking the evidence as a whole, as it appears in this record, we are strongly impressed with the belief that the plaintiff was not poshed or forced from the train, but that he stepped off, miscalculating the speed of the train, and finding he was going faster than he supposed, and to avoid falling, he held on to the car until he collided with the trucks. Indeed, we may say there is really no conflict in the evidence, since all the proof in the ease may be harmonized consistently with this theory. We do not forget that in the testimony of the various witnesses there is more or less discrepancy on some points. They do not all agree as to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Ill. App. 36, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-fisher-illappct-1889.