Chicago City Railway Co. v. Tuohy

58 L.R.A. 270, 63 N.E. 997, 196 Ill. 410, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3113
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 58 L.R.A. 270 (Chicago City Railway Co. v. Tuohy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago City Railway Co. v. Tuohy, 58 L.R.A. 270, 63 N.E. 997, 196 Ill. 410, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3113 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—At the close of the evidence of appellee, the plaintiff below, the appellant, defendant below, asked the court to give the jury a written instruction to return a verdict of not guilty. This instruction was refused, and exception was taken to such refusal. At the close of all the testimony in the case, the defendant below again presented to the court a written instruction directing the jury to return a verdict of not guilty, and asked the court to give such instruction. The court refused to do so, and exception was taken to such refusal. The question is thus raised whether or not the evidence justified the court in submitting the case to the jury. Where the evidence before the jury, with all the inferences proper to be drawn therefrom, tends to prove the cause of action set out in the declaration, the court should not peremptorily direct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty. (Union Bridge Co. v.Teehan, 190 Ill. 374).

The cars of the appellant upon Thirty-fifth street were propelled by electricity by means of electric' wires strung overhead, and were known as trolly cars. There were two tracks laid in Thirty-fifth street, the cars going east running upon the south track, and the cars going west running upon the north track. The car, which inflicted the injury, had stopped at Lincoln street, two blocks west of Wood street, to take on a passenger, but after that did not stop until it passed beyond Wood street to the point where the appellee was injured. Just before the accident the appellee was standing in company with another boy eleven years old, named Thomas Bonner, near the intersection of Wood street and Thirty-fifth street on the south side of Thirty-fifth street, and near the corner made by the intersection therewith of Wood street. The sidewalk was about fourteen feet wide between the curb and the building line of the houses frontingupon the street. The space between the curb at the edge of the sidewalk and the south rail of appellant’s south track was about twelve feet. At that time appellee lived with his father and mother on Thirty-fourth court near the corner of an alley west of Wood street, and not much farther than a block or a block and a half from where the accident occurred. The boy, Thomas Bonner, lived with his father on Wood street about a block and a half from where the appellee lived. Frank Bonner, the father of Thomas Bonner, was a lamp-lighter in the employ of Michael J. Tuohy, appellee’s father. The accident occurred about five o’clock in the afternoon. There was a lamp-post about eighty-two feet east from the south-east corner of Wood and Thirty-fifth streets. Frank Bonner had sent his son, the boy Thomas Bonner, to the house of appellee’s father to get a filler of oil for the purpose of filling some of the street lamps. Upon going to the house of appellee’s father to get the oil, appellee asked permission to accompany Thomas Bonner, and his mother permitted him to do so. They went south and crossed the tracks, and stood near the corner of Wood and Thirty-fifth streets on the south side of Thirty-fifth street while Frank Bonner, the father, was lighting the lamp, distant eighty-two feet from the corner, or thereabouts. Frank Bonner had requested the boys to stand at the corner until he finished lighting the lamp. There is testimony in the record, tending to prove that the car, which caused the injury, was traveling at an unusually high rate of speed, that is to say, from fourteen to sixteen miles an hour, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses. There is also evidence, tending to show that no bell was rung or gong sounded upon the approach of the car to the street crossing.

It is incumbent upon those in control of a street car to exercise a greater degree of care or watchfulness at street intersections than at other places along the route. (Booth on Street Railways, sec. 306; West Chicago Street Railroad Co. v. McCallum, 169 Ill. 240; Chicago City Railway Co. v. Robinson, 127 id. 9). Drivers, gripmen and motormen of street cars, are obliged at all times to exercise reasonable care in the conduct of their cars, but the requirement of reasonable care imposes upon them a more exacting attention when they approach street crossings in a crowded city where vehicles and pedestrians may always be expected in front of them. “The failure under; such circumstances to ring the bell, sound the gong, or give other proper warning * * * is undoubtedly evidence of negligence to be submitted to a jury under all the circumstances,” whether there is an ordinance requiring such precautions or not. The increase of danger to the public at such crossings demands a corresponding increase of vigilance and energy on the part of such drivers, gripmen and motormen. They ought to notice whether or not the track is clear when they approach such public crossings, and sound the gong as warning. (2 Thompson on the Law of Negligence, secs. 1399-1401).

Counsel for appellant insist that the appellee was not at the crossing. While this may be strictly and technically a correct statement of the facts, yet the evidence tends to show that the appellee was struck only about twenty feet east of the crossing, and so near thereto as to have required a slackening of the speed of the car. The evidence tends to show that the boys had been instructed by the father of one of them to stand at the corner until he had finished lighting his lamp, and, while they may have moved a short distance east of the corner, they were near enough thereto to demand of the appellant the exercise of the care required in propelling its cars across a street crossing.

Even, however, if the party injured was not sufficiently near the crossing to justify the application of the increased vigilance required of a street car company in approaching a crossing, yet there is evidence tending ’to show that the speed of the train was unreasonable and dangerous. Street cars propelled by electricity cannot be lawfully run at a rate of speed which is incompatible with the lawful and customary use of the highway by others. Here, the appellee had as much right to be upon the street as the appellant. (2 Thompson on the Law of Negligence, sec. 1395). A street railway company has no property interest in the street, and, therefore, no right to run its cars at a rate of speed which will interfere with the customary use of the street by others of' the public with safety. Such cars can be more readily and quickly stopped than the train of an ordinary railroad. Where the motorman or gripman runs his car at such a rate of speed that he is prevented from keeping control of it, so as to stop it within a reasonable distance upon an appearance of danger to others, the rate of speed, at which he propels the car, is to be deemed unreasonable or dangerous. It has been held that, where an electric car was running at the rate of ten or eleven miles an hour over a crossing in a much frequented street without giving any signal, there was such evidence of negligence as justified a submission of the case to a jury. (2 Thompson on the Law of Negligence, secs. 1395-1397).

The evidence in the case tends to show that, when Frank Bonner had finished lighting the lamp and came down from the ladder, the appellee, with his face towards the track, stepped down from the curbing at the edge of the sidewalk to the street, and then turned around, and while backing towards the north-west and towards the south track, he talked with the other boy standing upon the sidewalk or curb with his oil can.

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Bluebook (online)
58 L.R.A. 270, 63 N.E. 997, 196 Ill. 410, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-city-railway-co-v-tuohy-ill-1902.