Chicago & Joliet Electric Railway Co. v. Spence

115 Ill. App. 465, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 345
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 1904
DocketGen. No. 4,391
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 115 Ill. App. 465 (Chicago & Joliet Electric Railway Co. v. Spence) 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 & Joliet Electric Railway Co. v. Spence, 115 Ill. App. 465, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 345 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

In March, 1902, the Chicago and Joliet Electric Railway Company was operating an electric car line between Chicago and Joliet. At a point near the Sag, a valley northeast of Lemont, it had a double track, but one of said tracks was out of use there, owing to a washout, and cars going in each direction had to use the remaining track. On March 28, during a fog, and owing to some misunderstanding, two cars going in opposite directions on the same track came into collision; the cars were demolished, one or more persons were killed, and other persons were seriously injured, including Samuel Spence, a passenger. He brought this suit against said railway company to recover damages for said injuries, and recovered a verdict and a judgment for §14,000, from which judgment the railway company prosecutes' this appeal.

Defendant does not question its liability, but it contends that the damages are excessive, and that the trial court committed certain errors upon questions affecting the damages.

Plaintiff received severe external injuries, some of which were of a temporary character, but the proof largely related to internal injuries. He apparently received some blow in the breast. The left side of his chest was depressed, and it was a question whether thereby the heart was enlarged, forced out of place and its action disarranged. There was proof tending to show an obstruction of the aorta, the vessel which conveys the arterial blood from the heart to the other arteries leading to all parts of the body, which obstruction plaintiff’s physician attributed to pressure resulting from fibrous adhesion due to hemorrhage in and about the aorta. The proof introduced by plaintiff tended to show that the injury to the heart and to the great artery was incurable, that it caused plaintiff’s permanent disability to engage in the active pursuits of life, and that any extraordinary exertion by plaintiff would. be likely to result in his death, owing to the feebleness of the action of his heart. This organ being out of sight, plaintiff introduced in evidence a skiograph or X-ray photograph of a portion of his chest,'made by a person engaged in the business of taking such pictures for physicians, and claiming to be an X-ray expert, the object of the proof being apparently to show the displacement of the heart, a thickening of the walls of the heart or the existence of unusually thick tissue in that vicinity, and to show generally the condition existing in and about plaintiff’s heart. Afterwards defendant called another X-ray expert, whose testimony tended to establish the value of such pictures, when properly taken, to show the condition of the internal organs of a patient; but he pronounced plaintiff’s skiograph -worthless, and gave in detail the reasons for his adverse criticism. When the jury retired defendant objected to this picture being taken by the jury to the jury room, but the court overruled the objection and allowed the picture to go to the jury room. It is argued the court erred in admitting the skiograph, and in permitting it to be taken to the jury room after it had been discredited. We have no doubt that the evidence of defendant’s X-ray expert shows such a picture can be a valuable aid to a disclosure of some internal conditions. We conclude that the testimony of the expert who took this picture made a proper case for its admission in evidence. It may be that the testimony of defendant’s expert strongly tended to show that this picture was not well taken, and was of but little value, but defendant did not then move to exclude it, or raise the question whether that proof would warrant its exclusion. Articles which are in evidence are properly sent to the jury room. Our statute says (chap. 110, sec. 55): “Papers read in evidence other than depositions, may be carried from the bar by the jury.” It is said in 12 Ency. of PL & Pr., 591-2, that the modern doctrine is that all papers and documents given in evidence (except depositions in some jurisdictions,) may properly be allowed to go out with the jury, and that the term “ papers in evidence” is construed to embrace almost all kinds of documentary evidence, including exhibits, whether moist or dried, solid or liquid. This picture was in evidence and no reason was shown to the court why it should be treated differently from any other exhibit which had been duly admitted. When defendant objected to its being sent to the jury room, it gave no reason for the objection, and did not ask that it be excluded or question its competency as evidence. Being properly in evidence it was properly sent to the jury room.

Plaintiff proved that he was assistant superintendent of the Western Stone Company from 1889 to 1892, at a salary of $1,500 per year; that he was superintendent of said company from 1892 to 1897, receiving $2,500 per year till some time in 1893, and thereafter $2,100 or $2,-250 per year; that he then became superintendent of a quarry in Tennessee for five or six months at $100 per month and his expenses; that he then worked for -the Sanitary District of Chicago two years, inspecting bridges, abutments and piers at $100 per month; that he next worked putting in concrete work for the water wheels of an electric light company at Kankakee at $125 per month and his board; that he was next employed putting in abutments for a bridge in Joliet at $125 per month; that he next worked for the Sanitary District at the controlling works at Lockport for $150 per month; and that thereafter till he was injured he was time-keeper and inspector at $125 per month for a construction company, which was putting up a line of poles to conduct electrical power from Joliet to Bridgeport. Defendant duly preserved the question of the competency of so much of this proof as showed the compensation paid plaintiff by the Western Stone Company and while superintendent of a quarry in Tennessee. It is argued this was too remote in time from the injury, and that it was employment of a different nature from that in which he was engaged at the time hehvas injured. Defendant relies upon West Chicago St. R. R. Co. v. Maday, 188 Ill. 308, where the trial court admitted over objection proof of what plaintiff earned during the ten or twelve years before the last five years preceding his injury, in an employment which he had abandoned five years before he was injured. The Supreme Court held it was error to permit plaintiff to prove what he had earned in an employment he had abandoned so long before the injury, the facts being too remote and dependent on too many collateral circumstances to give the jury any correct information of plaintiff’s earning power at the time of the injury, and of which he had been depi’ived by the injury; but that such error ought not to reverse, as it was apparent that proof was not prejudicial to defendant. In West Chi. St. R. R. Co. v. Dougherty, 209 Ill. 241, the plaintiff testified he had earned §100 per month in a rolling mill for sixteen years, and about two months before his injury he had left the mill and engaged in a much less remunerative employment. It was argued it was error to permit proof that he earned §100 per month in the mill, but it was held that as it showed what he earned but two months before the injury it was competent. The proof in the present case tended to show plaintiff had ability as a superintendent, inspector and supervisor of the labor of others, capable of being profitably used in many different kinds of work, and we are unable to see that it ivas error thus to show plaintiff’s earning ability by the actual facts, as he had usually acted in such capacity of superintendent or inspector.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 Ill. App. 465, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-joliet-electric-railway-co-v-spence-illappct-1904.