Chicago, Burlington & Northern Railroad v. Hawk

42 Ill. App. 322, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 710
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 322 (Chicago, Burlington & Northern Railroad v. Hawk) 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, Burlington & Northern Railroad v. Hawk, 42 Ill. App. 322, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 710 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This case was tried by this court at the December term, 1889, and the judgment of the court below was reversed, but the cause not remanded, as this court was of the opinion .that there was no evidence in the record tending to sustain any of the charges of negligence on the part of the appellant, charged in the appellee’s declaration, and also we were of the opinion that there was want of ordinary care on the part,of the appellee, as disclosed by the evidence, and those facts being found by this court differently from those found by the court below, and the judgment being reversed for that reason, we ordered the finding of those facts to he incorporated and entered into the judgment of reversal, but by some misprisión of the former clerk of this court the judgment of reversal was entered by him without incorporating therein the finding of facts by this court as ordered. The appellee appealed to the Supreme Court and upon a hearing of the case by .that court the judgment of this court was reversed and the cause remanded to this court because the record as it appeared there failed to show the necessary finding of facts as required by law, and directed this court in its judgment of reversal that “if it shall again enter a judgment of reversal based upon a finding of facts differently from that found by the trial court, that it recite in its final order the material ultimate facts as found by it from the evidence upon the issues submitted to and tried by the Circuit Court.”

We have again considered the case and have arrived at the same conclusion that we heretofore did. The opinion filed by this, court on the former hearing, written by Judge C. B. Smith, May 28, 1890, and reported 36 Bl. App. 327, expresses our views of the case fully, and the same will be fand is hereby adopted by this court as the opinion herein as follows, to wit:

' This is an action on the case, and comes here on appeal by appellant from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Carroll County. The material facts involved in this suit as disclosed by this record are these: Appellant owns and operates its road from St. Paul to Oregon in Ogle County, and from Oregon it runs its trains of cars over the Chicago and Iowa Bail-road to Aurora. At Aurora, all its trains are stopped and broken up, and cars to go farther eastward and to Chicago are taken into custody by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Bailroad Co. under some kind of a running arrangement with that road. The Burlington and Northern has nothing further to do with the cars or the stock after it is delivered to the C. B. & Q. road, and both cars and stock pass under the exclusive control of the C. B. & Q. road. But, notwithstanding this arrangement, appellant issues through shipping bills to Chicago, and gives its shippers, when in company with their stock, free passes, subject to certain regulations as to the amount of stock and the number of persons allowed to go with it under a free pass.

Appellee, Addison II. Hawk, lived at Chadwick, on the line of appellant’s road, and was and had been for some time a dealer and shipper in stock over appellant’s road, and was familiar with the methods, rules and mode of shipment on appellant’s road.

On the 7th day of September, 1887, appellee shipped one carload of hogs from Chadwick to -Chicago over appellant’s road, and had them billed for Chicago in the usual and customary shipping contract of appellant’s road. His own name was indorsed on the back of this contract as being entitled to pass free in accompanying his stock to Chicago.

Two other shippers, Hr. Bishop ánd Hr. Wakefield, also had stock for the same train, and they, in company with appellee, with their stock, started for Aurora and reached there some time after dark. As soon as the train reached Aurora, appellee, Hr. Bishop and Hr. Wakefield, left the caboose and train and went to a neighboring restaurant to get a lunch, and while they were at lunch, the train passed into the custody of the C. B. & Q. road and was at once broken up by the switch engines in the yard and the cars distributed to their proper places and for their proper destinations in the trains then being made up by the C. B. & Q. in its own yard. Appellee’s stock was put in a train made up to go to Chicago that night, and was to and did leave Aurora about 9:30 p. m. The yards in Aurora are extensive and consist of a great many tracks, and are more or less covered with cars and trains being made up for different points, with several switch engines constantly at work shifting a great many cars from train to train.

After appellee and his companions had eaten their lunch, they went in search of the caboose and train upon which they were to continue their journey to Chicago. Hot knowing where the caboose or train could be found, or where it would start from, they walked up among the tracks in the yard, where they observed a switch engine at work moving cars about from place to place, and among these cars which were being moved about by this engine was a caboose. Appellant swears they saw a man moving about in the yard with a lantern apparently taking the number of cars, and that they asked him where the train of cars was, which was to take the C. B. & H. stock to Chicago, and that the man then pointed out “ that caboose down there with the engine attached to it;” and that thereupon they went to this caboose, intending to get into it. Appellee then said to his companions, “ We will go up to the caboose; there are too many engines switching around here, we will get hurt.” Appellee and Wakefield got upon one end and Bishop on the other, but they found no light in the caboose, and the doors locked, and no person in charge of it except the engineer, who had hold of one end of it with his engine, switching it about with other cars, and bumping it against other cars in the manner usual to switching cars. Appellee and his companions made no inquiry of the engineer or fireman about the caboose when they found it dark and unoccupied, but kept their places in the ends of the caboose, while it was being thus hauled about by the engine. Appellee testifies that while so on the caboose, he was sitting on the guard rail with his face to the door of the coach, holding to the iron ladder and his feet hanging down, resting on the floor of the platform of the car. He was holding to the ladder as he says, to brace himself, not thinking of any accident, and talking. While in this position the moving cars came in contact with other cars, causing the car he was on to rebound, and that from such bump and rebound of the car he lost his balance, and that his feet was thrown backward over the end of the platform, and that one of his feet was caught between the shoulder of the drawbar and the wooden crane upon which the platform rests, and when the cars again came together, his great toe was so mashed that it had to be amputated that night. The injury was not regarded at that time as being very serious or liable to result in a permanent injury to appellee, but the wound refused to heal, and the injury resulted very disastrously to the health of appellee, and involved him in great suffering for a long time.

There are five counts in the declaration. They are not substantially different.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 322, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-northern-railroad-v-hawk-illappct-1891.