Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Smith

77 Ill. App. 492, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 79
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 31, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 77 Ill. App. 492 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Smith) 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. Smith, 77 Ill. App. 492, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 79 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Worthington

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action by administrator for causing death of deceased.

Four counts in declaration, charging respectively that the train was carelessly run and driven; that no bell was rung or whistle sounded; that an ordinance of the village of Madison prohibited a speed greater than ten miles an hour, and that appellant’s train was. driven over a highway crossing within the limits of said village at a greater speed than ten miles; and that the space between a rail of appellant’s track and a plank on the crossing was too wide, and that in consequence thereof, the foot of deceased was caught in the space, and he was thereby held and killed. All counts averred due care on part of deceased. Plea of not guilty. Verdict and judgment for appellee for $1,000.

Appellant’s track crosses a highway in the ■ village of Madison, leading west from the village toward the Mississippi river. At the point of crossing, the track is higher than the surrounding surface, and overlooks low ground between it and the river. At the crossing there are six railroad tracks commencing at the west, and being in order as follows : Chicago & Alton, Big Four side track, Big Four main track, Big Four side track, Wabash main track, and Wabash side track. Distances, from the east rail of the Alton track to the west rail of the first Big Four side track, seven feet, five inches; from the east rail of this side track to the west rail of the Big Four main track, seven feet, seven inches; from the Big Four main track to the Big Four east side track, eight feet, four inches; from this track to the Wabash main track, fifty-two feet, six inches.

Deceased resided in St. Louis and had no property in this State. Letters of administration were issued to appellee by ■the County Court of St. Clair County, Illinois.

It is in evidence that at the crossing the highway was planked, and that the space between the plank and the rails when put down, was two and one-half inches, which had been left for the flanges of the locomotives and car wheels to run in; that the space had been worn by the flanges of the wheels to two and seven-eighths inches at the west rail where deceased was killed.

The disputed facts in the case are, was the bell rung and the whistle sounded; and was the deceased in the exercise of reasonable care at the time of the accident. The evidence shows that appellant’s train was a passenger train, and was running at from thirty-five to forty miles an hour, while an ordinance prohibited a speed in excess of ten miles an hour. As to the bell and whistle, the testimony, while conflicting, tends to prove that both were sounded. The real issue in the case is, was the deceased in the exercise of reasonable care. The jury by their verdict say that he was. An examination of the evidence does not warrant us in saying that he was not.

The circumstances of the accident appear from the evidence to have been as follows:

Morris Eodgers, the deceased, living in St. Louis, on the Sunday of his death, came to the house of one Devaney, in Madison, to see his son who worked for Devaney. His son was not at Devaney’s, but was fishing somewhere in the' bottom between the railroad highway crossing and the river. Eodgers; in company with a lad, Lawrence Benson, about nine years old, left Devaney’s and came to the highway crossing, where he stopped, while the lad went down in the bottom to find his son. Not finding him, the' lad came back to the crossing and reported. They were standing on or near the space between the Big Four west side track and the Big Four main track. While there talking, a freight train outward bound, was seen coming up on the Big Four main track. To avoid this train they started west to cross appellant’s track. While' doing so they saw appellant’s train, inward bound, coming down in the opposite direction to the Big Four freight train. The space between the-nearest rails of the Big Four main track and appellant’s track is about fifteen feet, so that the space between trains meeting and passing at the crossing would be, taking into account the projection of the cars over the rails, from ten to twelve feet. In crossing appellant’s track, the testimony strongly tends to show that one of the deceased’s feet was caught in the space between the west rail of the track and the plank of the crossing. He struggled to free himself and shoved the boy over the track out of the way of the locomotive, but being unable to free himself, he was struck by it and killed. The testimony shows an indentation on the heel of one of his boots and the heel and sole partially torn off. The engineer and fireman on appellant’s locomotive saw the man and boy when attempting to cross the track, and describe them as “ squabbling,” or “ tussling,” or as stated by one of them, that the “ man seemed to be trying to hold the boy.”

The engineer testifies: “As the train came around in sight of the crossing, I noticed a Big Four freight train going north. That was as I came around the curve. I at once, knowing there was a crossing there, began to look out for people coming on the track, so as to prevent striking anybody or having any trouble. When I came in sight of the crossing, I saw a man and boy standing on the road crossing on the track of the Chicago & Alton road. I gave the danger signal and applied" the air brake. It attracted the attention of the boy and he notified the man. * * * When I saw they knew the train was coming I released my brakes for a minute, for I had been giving the danger signal, and the boy started to get off, but the man was holding to him. The boy tore loose and got off the track. The man and boy were on the east side of the track. He got over to the west railing and was in a leaning position when I struck him. * * * The man did not seem to make any effort to get off the track. He made no attempt whatever. * * * When I saw the man wasn’t going to get out of the way, I threw the brake on again. I should judge the engine was then about seveny-five feet away when I made up my mind the man wasn’t going to get off. * * * Eunning at the rate of thirty miles an hour, I think I could stop that train in 500 feet. Eunning at the rate of ten miles an hour, I could probably stop that train in thirty feet. I saw the man and boy on the crossing just as I came around the curve, about 1,200 feet away.”

If this testimony “ that the man made no attempt whatever ” to get off the track was true, appellee should not have recovered. The jury evidently did not believe that it was true, and neither do we. The testimony of the engineer and fireman tends to prove suicide on the part of the deceased, coupled with an attempt to cause the death of the boy by holding him until the engine should strike him. The juiy evidently, and we think rightly, discredited their conclusions, and believed the “ squabbling ” and “ tussling ” as they termed it, to have been the desperate effort of the man to save himself and the boy.

Appellant insists that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to cross its tracks, seeing that its train was approaching. This was for the jury to determine under all the circumstances of the case. The jury doubtless concluded that a prudent man would not care to stand on a space, ten or twelve feet wide, between two trains passing in opposite directions. There was, too, ample time to cross appellant’s track, if appellant’s train had been running ten miles an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ill. App. 492, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-smith-illappct-1898.