City of Chicago v. Smith

95 Ill. App. 335, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 468
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 Ill. App. 335 (City of Chicago v. Smith) 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
City of Chicago v. Smith, 95 Ill. App. 335, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 468 (Ill. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Me. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee was seriously injured while walking rightfully upon the east sidewalk of State street near Adams street, in Chicago, about six o’clock on the evening of October 17, 1898, by the falling of a large arch upoji him that had been constructed at that point a few days before. One of his legs ivas broken in two places and several of his ribs were broken, and he was otherwise severely injured. He recovered a judgment for $7,500 in the suit brought by him against the appellant for his damages. No question is made as to the amount of recovery, if he is entitled to recover anything.

The arch in question was twenty-six feet high and about six by seven feet wide at the bottom, and extended from sidewalk to sidewalk across State street. It had been constructed by the National Peace Jubilee Committee, under authority of the City of Chicago granted by the city council, by an ordinance which required the work to be done under the supervision of the commissioner of public works of the city. A strong wind was blowing at the time the arch fell. The suit was originally against the city and various members of the Jubilee Committee, but afterward these various persons paid the appellee $2,500 and he dismissed as to them, giving them an agreement or covenant not to sue them for any matters existing at the date thereof.

Appellant relies upon the following points for reversal of the judgment:

“1. The declaration was fatally defective in that it is not alleged that the arch was one which appellant had authority to build, and therefore the motion in arrest should have been sustained.
2. The peremptory instruction requested by appellant at the conclusion of all the evidence offered in the case, should have been given by the trial court for the reasons :
{a) The building of the arch and all things connected with it ivas ultra vires the corporation.
(I)) There is no evidence in the record which shows the arch in question was defectively constructed; there is no evidence in the record that appellant had notice of any defects in the construction if the arch had existed for such a length of time that appellant ought to have known of such defects.
(c) The evidence showed that the accident in question was occasioned solely by inevitable accident, or the act of God, that is, by the storm.
{d) The evidence showed that appellee executed a release of the members of the Jubilee Committee and others jointly liable with appellant, releasing them from damages in the case.
3. The evidence does not support the verdict.
4. The court refused to give to the jury defendant’s requested instruction telling the jury that if the arch was made of reasonably good material and was constructed in such a manner as to be reasonably safe for the purpose for which it was intended under ordinary circumstances and its fall was caused by an unusually or exceptionally strong wind, they should find the defendant not guilty.
5. The court gave to the jury, at the request of the plaintiff below, an instruction telling the jury that it might find a verdict against the defendant, even though the evidence showed the appellee had been paid money by other persons than appellant, who were jointly liable with appellant, and had released such other persons so jointly liable with appellant.
6. The instructions given by the court below in relation to the appellee’s right of recovery, if the evidence showed appellee had released any one jointly liable with the appellant, were irreconcilable and conflicting.”

We will take up and consider these points in the order stated.

The declaration does not allege that the arch in question was erected by the city, nor does the evidence tend to show that it was erected by the city. The cause of action stated in the declaration and which the evidence sustained, was that the city permitted and suffered its streets and street crossings to become dangerous to the public by the negligent and careless erection therein of the arch, by persons licensed by the city to erect it. It can not be disputed, and is not, that the city had control of its streets, and that the public, in the exercise of due caution, had the right of safe passage along and upon them, reasonably free from dangerous obstructions or erections. But if the declaration were subject to the charge of being defective, its sufficiency was not subject to being questioned by a motion in arrest of judgment after demurrer thereto was overruled and the city had pleaded over.

“It is a settled principle that, after a judgment on demurrer, there can be no motion in arrest of judgment for any exception that might have been taken on arguing the demurrer. 2 Tidd’s Practice, 917. * * * If the defendant deemed "his demurrer well taken he should have abided by it and not tendered an issue on the facts. By abandoning the demurrer, and pleading to the whole declaration, he admitted its sufficiencjn” American Express Company v. Pinckney, 29 Ill. 392; Quincy Coal Company v. Hood, 77 Ill. 68; Order of Mutual Aid v. Paine, 122 Ill. 625.

The second point may be considered in connection with its several subdivisions. As already said, it was not alleged and there was no evidence that the city built the arch. The city’s act in the matter of constructing the arch was to authorize the Jubilee Committee, by an ordinance of the city council, to erect it, and presumably, for the purpose of securing the safety of the public, require that it should be done and maintained under the supervision of the commissioner of public works. And it was the careless and negligent erection and maintenance of the arch in pursuance of such authority, whereby the safety of persons lawfully upon the street was endangered, that was the gist of the declaration and the evidence in support thereof. The motion for a peremptory instruction at the close of all the evidence, to find the defendant not guilty, did not raise the question of the sufficiency of the declaration.

“ As the only point in issue on demurrer to the evidence is whether the evidence is sufficient in law to maintain the issue in fact, no exception can, on such a demurrer, be taken to any defect in the pleadings, as the demurrer does not extend to them.” Rothschild v. Bruscke, 131 Ill. 265.

We regard the evidence as abundantly sustaining appellee’s claim that the arch was defectively constructed. It was plainly, if not palpably so, and the fact that it was built under the authorized supervision of the commissioner of public works, bound the city with notice of the character of the work and of the condition in which it was left. Village of Jefferson v. Chapman, 127 Ill. 438.

The mere"fact that a high wind was blowing at and before the arch fell did not make the falling of the arch an act of God, so as to exempt the appellant from liability.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Ill. App. 335, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-smith-illappct-1901.