Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Robinson

8 Ill. App. 140, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 308
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 18, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ill. App. 140 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 8 Ill. App. 140, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 308 (Ill. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

McCulloch, P. J.

This case belongs to a class which are almost stereotyped in the courts of this State. Appellee while riding in a closely covered carriage with her husband, was injured by a collision between one of appellant’s engines and the carriage at the crossing of a highway. The railroad and highway approach each other from the north-east and east on two sides of an acute angle. Appellee, with her husband, was approaching directly from the east along the highway on the north side of which were a hedge and a few apple-trees; but from the testimony of the husband these did not interpose any material obstruction in the way of his seeing the approaching train. He was well acquainted with, and was in the habit of frequently passing over this crossing, and says he did not depend much on ¡signals as he did not remember of any having ever been given at that point. From the time he entered appellant’s right-of-way and passed the end of the hedge fence, which was at least fifty feet from the center of the track, he says he could have seen the engine if it had been within twentjr-five or thirty rods of the crossing; that both he and appellee looked out and saw no train; that he drove slowly upon the track and saw no train until it was within two hundred feet of the crossing; that he did all he could to get out of its way but failed, and just as the carriage was about to leave the track it was struck by the engine causing the injuries to appellee for which this suit is brought.

The acts of negligence complained of are that appellant did not, at said crossing put up or keep warning boards, or keep a watchman; that it neglected to ring a bell or sound a whistle as required by law; that it carelessly and negligently permitted and suffered large banks of earth and weeds, brush and other obstructions to stand and grow at and along its track and grounds near said crossing, thus obstructing the view of passing trains; that it ran a wild train at a high and dangerous rate of speed at an unusual time of the day, and carelessly conducted said train without ringing a bell or blowing a whistle and without slackening its speed on approaching said crossing. It is true this was a wild or extra train, consisting of the engine, one baggage car and one coach, running at an unusual hour for passenger trains, and from the fact, in proof that it was going to the relief of a wrecked train further to the west, there appears to be a motive for its run'ning at a very rapid rate, which also appears from the evidence. The injury was not caused by any failure to keep up warning boards, for appellee and her husband were aware of the existence of the railroad at that point as well as if the board had been there. Hor were there any such material obstructions, such as weeds or brush, growing upon appellant’s right-of-way, as to have hidden the approaching train from view.

The case seems to rest upon whether or not appellant’s servants, in running the train at an unusual hour at a great rate of speed; in failing to ring the bell or sound the whistle; in failing to keep a proper lookout or give proper warning, or to run the train with sufficient caution in approaching the crossing, were guilty of negligence which resulted in the injuries to appellee. On the other hand, it is contended that appellee was guilty of such contributory negligence as to prevent a recovery, even if appellant’s servants were guilty of some degree of negligence contributing to the injury. Although the husband of appellee testifies that after entering upon appellant’s right-of-way he could only see twenty-five or thirty rods in the direction of the approaching train, yet from the testimony of other credible witnesses, who went upon the ground and made actual observations with an engine and made accurate measurement, the evidence is very strong that, instead of thirty-rods, the approaching train was plainly in sight from any point on the highway within appellant’s right-of-way for a distance of at least sixty rods. An incontrovertible fact in the case is that, at the moment the carriage entered the right-of-way of the railroad, the engine was at such a distance from the crossing that, when both carriage and engine had moved at their relative rates of speed during the interval of time occupied by the cí .age in passing from the line of the right-of-way to the crossing, the collision occurred. The husband of appellee testifies that he was then driving at the rate of about three miles per hour. If this be-true as to his rate of speed, then if the train was moving at thirty miles per hour, it would in the same time travel ten times the distance over which the carriage moved; or if the train was moving at sixty miles per hour, it would travel twenty times the distance over which the carriage moved in the same time. The distance from the center of the track to the line of the right-of-way is shown to be about fifty feet, or three rods. Now if the train had been running at the rate of sixty miles per hour, or one mile per minute, and the carriage moving at the rate of three miles per hour, or sixteen rods per minute, the train could not have been more than sixty rods distant from the crossing, at the instant the carriage entered the right-of-way of the railway.

Considerable testimony was taken to show that several gaps existed in the hedge some distance back from the corner through which the approaching train could have been seen but we regard this of little consequence, as the time necessary for the carriage to pass from the nearest of them to the crossing would have given the train time to have run at least half a mile at a very moderate speed. There is also some evidence tending to show that the train was somewhat obscured by passing through cuts and by dirt thrown out upon the sides of the same. These, however, did not intervene between the carriage and the engine at any point between the passage of the carriage into the right of way and the place of the collision. The proof, therefore, strongly tends to show that, even if the train was moving at the extraordinary rate of sixty miles per hour, the persons in charge of the engine and those in the carriage were in full view of each other from the time the carriage came upon the right-of-way until the time of the collision. It appears also to be true that neither saw the other until just a moment before the collision. Had the speed of the carriage been accelerated but a second or two of time, or the speed of the train retarded by the same short space, the injury in all probability would not have happened. A trifle more diligence on the part of the engineer, a slight slackening of speed, the ringing of the bell, or the sounding of the whistle, might have been the means of avoiding a disastrous collision; while a very little more careful observation on the part of appellee or her husband (whose care or want of care as driver of the carriage must in this case be imputed to appellee) might have saved appellee from a life of permanent disability. As to which party is responsible for this calamity, and whether or not appellee’s negligence, if any such is imputable to her, was slight, and that of'appellant’s servants was gross when compared with each other, are problems peculiarly within the province of the jury to determine. That it is the duty of a person approaching a railroad crossing to carefully look out for approaching trains, although the signals required by law are not given, and that it is gross negligence to omit this precaution has been so often held to be the law that we forbear, citing authorities in support of the rule.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ill. App. 140, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-robinson-illappct-1881.