Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. v. Greenfield

53 Ill. App. 424, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 323
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 22, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 53 Ill. App. 424 (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. v. Greenfield) 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 & Quincy R. R. v. Greenfield, 53 Ill. App. 424, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 323 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellee, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, George Greenfield, brought this suit against appellant to recover damages on account of his death, caused by a train of appellant at a street crossing in the city of Sandwich, on the evening of August 6, 1892. The declaration contained four counts. The negligence charged in the first count was the failure to keep a flagman at the crossing to give warning of the approach of the train, as required by an ordinance of the city providing that such flagman should be stationed there between the hours of seven o’clock a. m. and ten o’clock p. m. The second count alleged that the death of Greenfield was due to the omission of the defendant to erect at the entrance of the railroad within the city a sign board having the words “ Stop speed,” “ Ring bell,” legibly painted thereon, as required by an ordinance of the city. The third count charged that it was the duty of the defendant to have kept and operated gates or other appliances at the crossing to prevent persons from going on the tracks when trains were passing and also to have kept a flagman there to Avarn persons, and charged neglect in both these particulars. The fourth count charged that the train in question was run at an unreasonably unsafe rate of speed. Each count averred due care on the part of the deceased. A plea of the general issue Avas filed and a trial was had at which the evidence established the folloAving facts: The injury occurred a few minutes after nine o’clock in the evening of August 6, 1892. At that time the Knights Templar were about to hold a conclave in the city of Denver, and they were being carried over defendant’s railway in special trains which were decorated and indicated the particular commandery on each train. Several of these trains had passed through Sandwich on the previous day, and one or more had passed on that day prior to the train in question. Many people had been out Avatching the trains as they passed, and the deceased, who Avas a tailor and had a shop near the .tracks, was aware of the special trains, and had been watching them to see the decorations.

The train in question was one of the special trains. It had five passenger coaches, and was running at about the rate of regular through passenger trains on that road. There were double tracks, and it approached Sandwich on the north main track. At Main street, where the accident occurred, the tracks crossed the street nearly at right angles, and there were íaato side tracks south of the main tracks. The distance between the center of the north main track on which the train was approaching, and the center of the south main track was fourteen feet. The distance from the center or the south main track to the center of the first side track south of it Avas twelve feet and nine inches, and the distance from the center of the latter track to the center of the south side track was tAventy-three feet and nine inches. The deceased came from the direction of his residence south of the tracks, and was going toAvard his shop which was on the north side. There was a car standing east of Main street on the south side track, but after passing that track there was a space of about forty-five feet unobstructed and from which the train could be seen for more than a mile by one crossing that space to the track on which the train was coming. The bell on the train was ringing and the whistle was blown several times before the train reached the depot, which was six hundred and eighty feet east of Main street. The train and the whistling attracted the attention of the people in the vicinity, and a good many of them gathered on Main street about the tracks to see the train go by. The evidence as to the accident came from those people and there was no conflict in their testimony that the train was in full view of the deceased while he crossed the open space from the south side track to the north main track. The evidence was that he started across that space with his head bent down looking at the walk in front of him, and that at some point he glanced up toward the east and increased his speed. There was a disagreement among the witnesses as to where he quickened his pace and the rate of speed, varying as to the point from the north main track to a point twenty-seven to thirty feet south of it, and as to the rate from a fast walk to a run. He was nearly over the track when he was thrown to the ground and injured so that he died very soon after. There was an ordinance requiring a flagman at the crossing from seven o’clock a. m. to ten o’clock p. m., and there was no flagman stationed there. Instead of providing a flagman the defendant had placed gates at the crossing, such as are generally used in cities, which were operated in the daytime so as to close the street by bars when trains were passing, but which were not operated at night. The train was running at the rate of about thirty miles an hour.

The jury returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty and assessing plaintiff’s damages at one thousand dollars, and also returned questions which had been submitted to them, together with their answers thereto, as follows:

1. Was there anything to obstruct the view of the train approaching Main street from the east to deceased, as he was passing north from the south switch track, at any point between that and the north main track ?

Answer. Nothing except a car on the sido track.

2. Was there anything on the right of way that obstructed the view of the deceased and prevented his seeing the incoming train, if he had looked east down the track, at any point on the railroad right of way, at Main street, south of the north track, and north of the south switch track ?

Answer. Nothing except a car on the side track.

3. Could the deceased, by the exercise of reasonable care and caution for his own safety, have seen the train in time to avoid the accident ?

Answer. Under the circumstances he might or he might not.

The defendant thereupon moved the court to require the jury to return specific answers to said questions, but the court denied defendant’s motion, and received and entered said special findings' as returned. The answers returned clearly manifest the intention of the jury to award the general verdict regardless of the undisputed and controlling facts touching the exercise of care by the deceased and to evade that question. The car on the side track mentioned in the answers to the first two questions was on the south side track, and there was not a particle of evidence tending to prove that it was within the limits stated in the question. The testimony of all the witnesses without exception was ¡that there was no obstruction whatever between the points ’named, and the jury could have found no reason in the evidence for mentioning the car, but such reason must be found elsewhere. The first two questions, however, only related to evidentiary facts tending to prove negligence on the part of the deceased and which would not, as a matter of law, necessarily control the general verdict; and as the court could not have been required to submit them at all, there was no error in refusing to resubmit them for more direct answers.

Before the plaintiff could recover, it devolved upon her to prove that the deceased, at the time of the accident, was in the exercise of ordinary care to avoid it. C., B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Johnson, 103 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Ill. App. 424, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-quincy-r-r-v-greenfield-illappct-1894.