Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Randolph

199 Ill. 126
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 199 Ill. 126 (Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Randolph) 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 & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Randolph, 199 Ill. 126 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The judgment in the sum of §1500, awarded the appellee against the appellant company in the circuit court of Vermilion county as damages for personal injuries sustained by appellee through the alleged negligence of the appellant company, was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Third District, and the record thereof is before this court by the further appeal of the railway company.

The appellee, while endeavoring to pass over the tracks of the appellant company at a public crossing in Germantown in a buggy, was run upon by the tender of a locomotive which servants of the appellant company were moving with a backward motion over and across the public crossing.

Counsel for the appellant company concede the evidence was such as to present to the jury, as a question of fact, whether the company was guilty of negligence as charged in the declaration. Counsel, however, contend it appeared in the evidence, without dispute, that the appellee, in going upon and attempting to cross the tracks of the railroad company, deliberately calculated upon the chances of driving across the tracks before the engine would reach the crossing and voluntarily took the risk of reaching and clearing the crossing before the engine could strike him, and that for this reason the court, in passing upon the motion entered by the appellant company for a peremptory verdict in its favor, should have held, as matter of law, the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence, and should have directed a verdict for the company.

The engine which struck the appellee had been engaged for fifteen or twenty minutes in switching cars back and forth across the public crossing, and during that period of time had obstructed the crossing. The appellee was waiting to cross, and the evidence tended to show that the engine was put in rapid motion toward the south, with every appearance that the work of switching had been finished there and that the engine was going away from the locality of the crossing to work elsewhere, and that he believed he could cross with entire safety. He therefore attempted to pass along the highway over the railway crossing. His view of the engine was obstructed by a freight car. Without any warning whatever the motion of the engine was suddenly reversed and it was moved rapidly backward over the crossing, and thus ran upon and injured the appellee. The trial court correctly regarded it as a question of fact, under the proof, whether the appellee_ exercised reasonable care for his own safety in attempting to cross the tracks. The question was not, as counsel for appellant argue, whether the appellee was free from even the slightest negligence, but whether he acted with that degree of care which a reasonably prudent and cautious person would have exercised under like conditions. (Chicago, St. Louis and Pittsburg Railroad Co. v. Hutchinson, 120 Ill. 587.) Slight negligence is not incompatible with due and ordinary care, and if one has proceeded with ordinary card, though slightly negligent, he has observed the degree of care required by law. Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Hessions, 150 Ill. 546; Chicago City Railway Co. v. Dinsmore, 162 id. 658.

Complaint is made that the appellee, in order to enhance his damages, was permitted to prove that his wife rendered services to him as a nurse, and that he agreed to pay her therefor. In this same connection we may consider the further complaint that the court erred in so framing an instruction given to the jury on the motion of the court, as to warrant the inclusion of the value of the services of the wife in assessing the damages to be awarded to the appellee.

The testimony having reference to the services of the wife in nursing the appellee was given by the appellee. It was, in substance, that he required care and nursing; that his wife and son and others, his neighbors, waited upon and nursed him; that he agreed to pay his nurses, including his wife, for their labor; that he was waited upon and nursed for thirteen weeks, and that the total expense for such services was ten dollars per week. Counsel for appellant did not object to this testimony, ask that it be excluded or that the jury be instructed to disregard it, or in any way ask the court to rule as to its admissibility, nor did the court make any ruling thereon. Counsel for appellant treated the testimony as admissible and proceeded to cross-examine with reference thereto, and in the course of such cross-examination brought out the fact that nothing had been said between the husband and wife as to how much should be paid to the wife. The court did not make, or was not asked to make, any ruling as to the admissibility of the testimony. The litigants proceeded upon the theory it was competent and proper proof. There is therefore nothing in the record on which to base an assignment that error intervened in the admission of the evidence. Had the objection been raised in the trial court the testimony might have been withdrawn or the jury instructed to disregard it and the record freed from error. The appellant company could not be permitted to omit all objection, act upon the testimony as legal and proper in the trial court, take the chances of a favorable verdict, and, that failing, complain in this court for the first time that an error thereby crept into the record.

In the instruction framed by the court, upon the motion of the court, for the purpose of advising the jury as to the elements of damages in the event the verdict should be for the plaintiff, the reasonable expenses, if any are proven, “in repairing the buggy and harness, in nursing and physician’s services,” are mentioned as proper for consideration. It is urged a general objection preserved to this instruction calls upon this court to reverse the judgment on the ground the instruction, in view of the evidence, authorized the jury to include the value of the services rendered by the wife in the damages assessed to be paid by the appellant company. The parties, in producing the testimony for the consideration of the jury, proceeded upon the theory the value of the services of the wife in nursing her husband, if rendered upon a contract that she should be paid therefor, was, in legal contemplation, proper to be considered by the jury in arriving at the damages sustained by the husband. In the instruction under review the court merely accepted the view entertained and acted upon by the parties, and instructed accordingly. The appellant company did not seek to have the jury otherwise instructed on the point, and cannot now be heard to complain that the jury were permitted to decide the case on evidence which it voluntarily allowed to go to the jury as proper and competent to be heard and considered.

The objection that a number of witnesses were improperly allowed to give in evidence opinions as to the injury received by appellee and its effect upon bis health is not well taken. We have examined all the testimony pointed out by counsel to which the objection applies. It consists of statements of witnesses that the appellee was “suffering,” was “nervous,” was “in misery,” “weak,” “feeble,” “in distress,” “sore,” “in pain,” “nauseated,” etc. This testimony was competent, within the rule laid down in. West Chicago Street Railway Co. v. Fishman, 169 Ill. 196. We there said (p.

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Bluebook (online)
199 Ill. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-eastern-illinois-railroad-v-randolph-ill-1902.