Chicago Union Traction Co. v. Brethauer

125 Ill. App. 204, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 335
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 4, 1905
DocketGen. No. 12,116
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 Ill. App. 204 (Chicago Union Traction Co. v. Brethauer) 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 Union Traction Co. v. Brethauer, 125 Ill. App. 204, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 335 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The objections made to the judgment in this cause, based upon the rulings on the evidence, we have carefully examined, all the more carefully because the damages hereinafter discussed, seem to us very large, and the question is of great importance, therefore, whether any thing ivas improperly admitted in evidence tending to mislead the jury and swell the amount allowed. But we do not find in the rulings any error. The most serious question, as it seems to us, arises on the introduction of the testimony of the plaintiff that he was making in his business (that of a wholesale jeweler) each month during the year preceding the accident $500, and that since he went back to it he had made only $50 to $75 a month in it. This was specifically objected to on the ground that there was no sufficient basis for it in the pleadings, and on the further ground that- a comparison of the profits in a jewelry business before and after the occurrence was not material to the question of damages. It is forcibly argued that such profits were dependent on too many contingencies to make the comparison of any value. What we might think of the question if it were res integra in this court, does not matter, for we think that the authorities in this State justify the ruling of the trial judge admitting the testimony and holding that the objection to it went merely to its weight and to its being a subject for cross-examination.

There can be no doubt that the declaration contained sufficient averments of a special damage in the loss of profits in business to allow the introduction of the testimony, if it were otherwise competent, and that it was so seems to us to be held in Chicago & Eastern Ill. R. R. Co. v. Meech, 163 Ill., 310, and Chicago City Ry. Co. v. Carroll, 206 Ill., 318.

The Illinois cases cited by appellant on this point seem to rest principally upon the want of averments of special damage in the pleadings. In Chicago & Eastern Ill. R. R. Co. v. Meech, the court says, speaking of similar evidence in relation to the profits of a contracting and employing painter: “It may be that the testimony in the case at bar in regard to prior earnings was entitled to little weight, owing to the fact that it "was confined to the earnings of but a single year, but that is a question of weight of evidence and a matter that was open for argument before the jury and the courts below; and if appellants had reason to suppose that the year immediately preceding the accident was for any cause an exceptional year, they could have shown that fact on cross-examination, or by the introduction of testimony.”

In the case at bar the evidence introduced seems to us of little weight, because by cross-examination it was made to appear that the appellee had gone through bankruptcy and had lost practically all his property by mortgage foreclosure the year before the injury occurred. This seems sufficient reason for a marked decrease in profits, and it must be presumed furnished ground for argument to the jury on the weight of the evidence in chief of the plaintiff on this subject.

We see no error in the admission of Dr. O’Heill’s testimony as to his opinion of the plaintiff’s mental condition before and since the injury.

It is strenuously insisted that it was error to allow evidence of the conversations concerning transfers between the plaintiff and the conductor of the Lincoln avenue car. We do not agree with this. Whether or not the plaintiff had entered defendant’s Halsted street car as a passenger, in good faith, supposing that he held for himself and the party under his charge tickets entitling them to a ride thereon, or, on the other hand, was a mere trespasser trying to defraud the company, -or even, in current phrase, “looking for trouble,” in-order to test the validity of a disputed ordinance, was a question which was material in several views. Its answer was material in throwing light on the animus of his conduct in the Halsted street car, in affecting the probability concerning disputed matters of fact in that conduct and in properly ascertaining the measure of damages for an ejection. Moreover, we think that this conversation and the transaction between the plaintiff and the Lincoln avenue conductor were in fact a part of the res gestee.

It is true, as claimed by appellant, that there are many cases in which acts and conversations removed in time from the main occurrence under investigation, no further than the conversation between the appellee and the Lincoln avenue conductor was removed from the ejection, have been held not part of the res gestee because not concurrent with nor “illustrating, explaining or interpreting,” as it is expressed in Chicago City Ry. Co. v. Uhter, 212 Ill., 174, the transaction immediately in issue. But it is not concurrence in time alone, nor separation in time alone, which has been made the test, as an analysis of the cases will show. The effect of a transfer ticket on one car cannot be altogether disjoined from the circumstances attending its reception on the connecting car, without violence to common sense. If it is properly used, in accordance with the rules, the reception and attempted use of it are substantially parts of the same transaction. We think our view of the admissibility of this evidence is founded on reason and analogy and fully borne out by authority in Illinois. Central R. R. Co. v. Davenport, 177 Ill., 110; Pennington v. Ill. Central R. R. Co., 69 Ill. App., 628; Wabash R. R. Co. v. Kingsley, 78 Ill. App., 236; Illinois Central R. R. Co. v. Harper, 83 Miss., 560; New York, L. E. & W. R. Co. v. Winter, 143 U. S., 60; and many other eases.

Hor was there any error in allowing the ordinances set up in the declaration to be put in evidence. Counsel for appellant seems to be under a misapprehension in regard to the effect of these ordinances. The Supreme Court has decided (Chicago Union Traction Company v. City of Chicago, 199 Ill., 484) that the transfer ordinance is valid. That means, of course, that it was valid and operative from its passage. Its validity did not depend on the decision of the court which merely announced it. The appellant chose to claim and consider it invalid, but it did so at the risk of its view of the law being, as it turned out to be, mistaken.

To eject against his wiB from the Halsted street car going north a 2>erson who had paid fare on the immediately preceding Lincoln avenue car going northwesterly, and who, boarding the Halsted street car at the intersection of the streets, offered evidence of such payment, was on January 12, 1902, an illegal and unlawful act, whatever litigation the company or other people were carrying on for the purpose of “testing the question as to the liability of appellant for refusing such transfers.”

The illegality and unlawfulness of the ejection was a proper matter for proof, both as affecting the conduct of the parties and the measure of damages.

“We fully recognize the doctrine,” said the Appellate Court of the Third District, “that a different rule obtains when the relation of passenger and carrier exists where a person is ejected from a train, than where the person is a trespasser or has not a right on the train,” (Wabash R. R. Co. v. Kingsley, 78 Ill. App., 236), and the proposition is good law and good sense.

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182 Ill. App. 123 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1913)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Ill. App. 204, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-union-traction-co-v-brethauer-illappct-1905.