Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Co. v. Wolfring

118 Ill. App. 537, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 261
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,440
StatusPublished

This text of 118 Ill. App. 537 (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Co. v. Wolfring) 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 Railway Co. v. Wolfring, 118 Ill. App. 537, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 261 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On November 25, 1901, before daylight, Henry Wolf-ring was driving west from. Twenty-fourth street in the city of Rock Island in an alley which was crossed by a switch or spur track of the Chicago,' Burlington & Quincy Railway Company by which it reached the buildings of the Hammond Packing Company. The switch track was about thirty feet west of Twenty-fourth street. There were buildings and sheds on each side of the alley, and the cars of the railway company came into and left the alley through gates across the track which were opened for that purposg. As Wolfring drove down the alley, some box cars propelled by an engine at their north end were pushed south across the alley into the Hammond plant. In some way Wolfring’s team, or the right hand horse, came into collision with this car, and the team was turned or pushed around and crowded into a space of six or seven feet between the track and a shed on the south side of the alley east of the track, and the hoof of the right hand horse came under one of the hind wheels of the head car, and he received such injuries that it became necessary to kill him. The harness also was injured. Wolfring brought this suit against the railway company to recover damages for the injuries so sustained. Upon a jury trial he had a verdict for $150 and a judgment thereon, from which the railway company appeals.

The declaration contains two counts. Each described the alley and the switch track and the surroundings. Each stated the duty of defendant in terms similar to the language used in plaintiff’s instructions hereinafter mentioned. But 'neither count charged a breach of the duty so alleged. As said in Jensen v. Wetherell, 79 Bl. App. 33: “What duty is incumbent on a defendant on the facts averred in plaintiff’s declaration is a question of law and not of fact. To state the duty is therefore superfluous and immaterial; it is mere surplusage, and not even obnoxious to special demurrer.” The general allegations of duty in the declaration were therefore immaterial, because they were not accompanied by any charge of a breach of such duty. The first count alleged, as a cause of action, that defendant wrongfully and negligently caused certain freight cars to be backed on the said switch track across said alley, at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and without any signal or warning to any one who might be passing along said public alley; and that while plaintiff was passing along the alley, with two horses hitched to a lumber wagon, and exercising due care for the safety of his horses and wagon, said freight cars, by reason of the negligence of defendant in backing them at a high and dangerous rate of speed without any signal or warning, ran upon and over plaintiff’s horse, and injured it, etc. The second count charged that defendant recklessly and negligently ran, pushed and backed its train of cars over said track and upon said alley, without giving any signal or warning to plaintiff of the approach of said cars, and that plaintiff had no knowledge or warning of the approach of the cars; and that the train so recklessly and negligently backed upon it without any warning to plaintiff, ran over one of plaintiff’s horses, etc. The wrongful act averred in the first count, therefore, was backing said cars across said alley at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and without any signal or warning to any one who might be passing along said alley; and in the second count it was backing said cars upon said alley without giving ■ any signal or warning to plaintiff of the approach of said cars.

In this condition of the declaration the court, at the request of plaintiff, gave to the jury instructions to the effect that when a railroad company backs its cars across a public alley in a city it must exercise such care in the operation of said cars as the public safety may reasonably require, and that if in this case defendant did not exercise such ordinary care as was required under all the circumstances of this case to give warning to the plaintiff of the approach of said cars, and if the plaintiff while driving along said alley and over said track with his horses and wagon was in the exercise of due care for the safety of his horses and property, and if because of the failure of defendant to exercise such ordinary care plaintiff’s property was injured, then he could recover; that it was the duty of a railroad company moving an engine and cars over a public alley in the city to give such warning of the approach of such engine and cars to travelers passing along said alley as may be necessary under all the circumstances of the case to constitute ordinary care, and that if the defendant company did not give such warning to plaintiff of the approach of its engine and cars, and if the failure to give such warning was a failure to exercise ordinary care under all the circumstances, of the case, and if in consequence thereof plaintiff was injured and at the same time he was injured he was exercising due and proper care for the safety of his property, then they should find for plaintiff; that it was the duty of defendant to use ordinary care in the operation of its trains over the public alleys of the city of Bock Island so as not to injure any one in person or property, while traveling across said alley, and if the defendant backed its cars upon and over plaintiff’s horse and property as charged in the declaration, and plaintiff was in the exercise of due and proper care for the safety of his horse and property, and if defendant did not under all the circumstances of the case exercise ordinary care in the operation of its said cars, and if by reason of such negligence of the defendant plaintiff was damaged, as alleged in the declaration, then they.should find for the plaintiff. The court also gave at plaintiff’s request an instruction which defined reasonable care and the absence thereof, or negligence, and told the jury it was to be determined by what an ordinarily prudent and careful man would have done under the particular circumstances of the case. The negligence charged in the first count being only backing the cars at a high and dangerous rate of speed without any signal or warning to any one passing along the alley, and in the second count backing the cars over the alley without giving any signal or warning to plaintiff of the approach of said cars, these instructions were a departure from the declaration and authorized a recovery against defendant upon entirely different grounds from those alleged in the declaration. These instructions permitted a recovery if defendant did not exercise ordinary care under all the circumstances of the case to give warning to plaintiff of the approach of the cars. That was not the case stated in the declaration. The proof is clear that the bell was rung, that the cars stopped just before they reached the alley, and that their speed did not exceed two or three miles per hour. The case stated in the declaration was therefore not proven. The error in giving these instructions requires a reversal of the case unless defendant is a party to the error.

But we find that defendant obtained from the court instructions based upon a.similar theory of what would render the defendant liable.

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Bluebook (online)
118 Ill. App. 537, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-quincy-railway-co-v-wolfring-illappct-1905.