Chicago & Eastern Illinois R. R. v. Burridge

107 Ill. App. 23, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 672
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 107 Ill. App. 23 (Chicago & Eastern Illinois R. R. v. Burridge) 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 & Eastern Illinois R. R. v. Burridge, 107 Ill. App. 23, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 672 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

IVÍr. Justice Bigelow

delivered the opinion of the court.

A number of errors are assigned on the record, one of which is, the refusal of the court to peremptorily instruct the jury, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, to find for the defendant; and another is, the refusal of the court to give the same instruction at the close of all the evidence in the case.

The Supreme Court in Lusk v. Throop, 189 Ill. 127, said: 11 The trial court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the appellants, if there was any evidence in the case tending to sustain the cause of action,” citing Boyce v. Tallerman, 183 Ill. 115. See also Labe Shore & M. S. R. R. Co. v. Ouska, 151 Ill. 232, and cases there cited.

That there is substantial evidence in this record to sustain plaintiff’s cause of action as set forth in the two counts of the declaration, on which the case was tried, admits of no doubt whatever, and the court properly refused to give each instruction.

Two other errors assigned are, in admitting improper evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, and in rejecting proper evidence on behalf of the defendant. To make certain what the exceptions to the rulings of the court were, appellant’s counsel refer us to “ pages 26, 34, 36, 43, 61, 62, 64, 68, 69, 72, 86, 89; 93, 100, 10,5,.109, 110, 111, 113,122,177,178,179, 180, of the abstract.” To notice these several rulings in "detail, as appellant’s counsel seem to desire should be done, would result in extending this opinion to an inordinate length; we therefore content ourselves by saying, we have carefully read and considered each and all of the rulings pointed out, as above stated, and find ourselves unable to say that the rulings or any of them, are so far incorrect as to require a reversal of the judgment.

' Another error assigned isj “The court below erred in refusing to strike from the record improper evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff.” This error is but a restatement of the error in admitting improper evidence offered by appellee, and is already disposed of.

Another error is that “ The court erred in rendering a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.” This seems to be a singular error to be assigned, in a case tried by a jury, a verdict returned and a motion for a new trial overruled, for how can it be said that the court has erred in rendering judgment on the verdict, which the law requires the court to render as a judicial duty ? If the verdict is right and judgment follows the verdict, rendering the judgment can not be error, and it is useless to assign it as such.

The court gave to the jury, at the request of appellee, seven instructions, and these are assigned for error, nominally in a body, but as each is separately argued, they will be so treated, so far as it may seem advisable to do so.

Counsel admit that the first instruction states a correct proposition of law, but the objection to it is, “ its peculiar phraseology.” So long as it contains a correct proposition of law that the jury could not fail to understand, we can not stop to inquire about the correctness of its literary construction, since it is only the correctness of its legal construction that we are concerned with. It could not have misled the jury, and there was no error in giving it.

Appellee’s second instruction, which it is claimed by appellant is grossly erroneous, is as follows :

2. “You are instructed that where a carrier of freight on its arrival at the place of destination, places the car containing such freight upon one of its side tracks, and notifies, invites or requires the consignee to remove such freight from its car, that the owner, who in pursuance of such notice, invitation or request proceeds to remove such freight from such car, while so engaged has the right to rely upon the carrier to exercise reasonable care not to injure him while so employed; and if you believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff was notified, invited or requested by the defendant to remove certain freight from a car placed by it upon one of its side tracks for the purpose of enabling the plaintiff to remove his goods therefrom, that while plaintiff was in said car for the purpose of so removing his freight, and in the exercise of due care for his own safety, the defendant’s servants in charge of one of its freight trains, either knowing of plaintiff’s presence in said car, or the circumstances being such that they ought in the exercise of ordinary care on their part to have known of his presence therein, thereafter negligently ran into said car with such force and violence as to overturn a safe therein contained upon the plaintiff, thereby injuring him, then you should find the defendant guilty.”

When the car that contained appellee’s goods arrived at its destination and was placed next to a public road where goods shipped as his were, were usually unloaded, and he was notified by appellant to unload and take tjiem away, and appellee and the men' he had employed to assist him, had begun to unload the goods, none of them were trespassers, to which appellant owed no duty, except to avoid willfully injuring them.

They were rightfully in the car before the train from the north that did the injury arrived at Salem, and so long as they were diligent in unloading the goods, they had a right to remain in the car. But whether appellee’s right to the car and to have it remain at the place where it was being unloaded, was superior to the right of appellant to take the car away, except in case of an emergency greater than ordinary switching of cars, is a question not necessary to be determined in this case.

But it is insisted by appellant’s counsel that appellee was not in the car for the purpose of unloading his goods, and should have gotten out of it before it was switched away from the place where the unloading began. We are unable to concur in this view of the matter. Appellee lost no right by remaining in the car and would have lost none had he remained where he was all day, if he had been prevented from unloading the car by the switching being done, which he clearly was.

The door of the car was open all of the time while the switching was being done, and it was not done to accommodate appellee. It was but natural that appellee should remain in the car, to see that none of his goods were lost or stolen or in anywise injured, if he-could avoid it, and the fact that he remained in the car when it was being switched around to various points, instead of being evidence that he was reckless as to his own safety, seems to us to be evidence of a contrary nature.

There was no error in giving the instruction—not even if it be conceded that appellee knew the car which struck the car he was in, was coming down to couple to his own car, and that he had also been advised by a brakeman that he had better alight from the car—matters which appellant insists are true, but the truth of which appellee emphatically denies. The various couplings of the cars that had been made before the one when appellee was injured, were, as appellee testified (and no one disputed him), easy and gentle and had done no harm, and he had no reason to expect the last coupling would be different from the former ones.

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Related

Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Bluhm
109 Ill. 20 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Ouska
37 N.E. 897 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1894)
Boyce v. Tallerman
55 N.E. 703 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Lusk v. Throop
59 N.E. 529 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 Ill. App. 23, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-eastern-illinois-r-r-v-burridge-illappct-1903.