City of El Paso v. Causey

1 Ill. App. 531
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Ill. App. 531 (City of El Paso v. Causey) 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 El Paso v. Causey, 1 Ill. App. 531 (Ill. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Pillsbury, J.

In 1872, Shur Tompkins & Co. erected a three-story brick building, with basement, on the southeast corner of block "forty-two, in El Paso. The building extends about one hundred feet on each street: Front street on the South and Central street on the east.

The corner room was occupied, by Shur Tompkins & Company as a bank; the next west, by Young & Tompkins as a dry goods store, then Tobias & Son, grocers, and the west one, by W. A. Johnson, hardware dealer. Under each of these rooms was a basement, used for business purposes, eight feet deep below the level of the sidewalk. The entrance to the basement under the store of Young & Tompkins was byea flight of steps commencing at the edge of the stone-flagging constituting the sidewalk and running at right angles therewith directly to the door of the basement. The north line of the stone pavement was four inches north of the line of the street and the south wall of the building was four feet from the north line of street.

This space between the sidewalk and building was excavated to the depth of the basement along the entire south front of the building, making an area about three feet eight inches wide. Protecting this area was an iron fence over three feet high, extending from the door of the bank to the east line of the basement stairs, where it was connected with a newel-post, eight inches in diameter, standing six inches from the inner edge of the sidewalk. The entrance to the basement was six feet in width and under the east window of the store. The entrance to the store was by a double door in a recess four feet deep, the sides of which recess were glass. An iron platform raised one step, and four and one half feet long; leads over the area from the pavement to the front door step. On each side of this platform was the terra; cotta, figure of a lion, about four feet high, and extending from tlie building to line of railing. From the west side of the store entrance the iron railing extends to the next entrance. The sidewalk was ten feet in width, made of Joliet flag-stone, jointed and hammered.

The front windows of the store were each four feet four inches in width and eleven feet high, and containing three panes of glass each.

The proof is full and 'complete in this record that the sidewalk area, entrances to basement and the stores, and the railing along the area, were constructed in the very safest manner known to practical architects, and equal to any in the largest cities of this country, and that they were at the.time of injury to the appellee, in the best repair.

On the first day of Hovember, 1875, the appellee Causey, was passing along the sidewalk from the east, with the intention of going into the store of Young & Tompkins to see a friend, and, as he says, mistaking the east window of the building for the door, he turned to the right around the newel-post and stepped oif the sidewalk in to the cellar-way, injuring himself quite seriously.

He brought this suit against Young & Tompkins and the city to recover damages for such injury. He claims, as one ground of recovery against the city, that the city was joint-owner of the building, and, therefore, liable, in that capacity for the excavation and the construction of the area and stairs.

It appears from the record that the city and some Masonic bodies desired to have halls in the upper story of the building for their respective uses, and an arrangement was made by which Shur Tompkins & Company, and P. H. Tompkins, would erect the building to the centre of the joists of the second floor, and the city and Masons were to complete the upper story and build the stairs leading thereto, put on the roof and keep the same in repair, and were then to be the owners of such upper story. There is no proof that the city had any interest in the land or the store-rooms, or any control over the building of the basement or the lower stories, as proprietor or part owner. We are all of the opinion that no liability attached to the city on the ground of ownership.

Does the case then show such negligence on the part of appellants as will render them liable for the injury sustained by appellee, under all the evidence in this record? It is a matter of common observation, that in all our cities business blocks are built with basements below the level of the sidewalk, and frequently such basements are most valuable for business purposes, and it is not only convenient, but absolutely necessary, that entrances should be had to the same from the street, in order to be available; and- such entrances have ever been permitted by the authorities of all cities; and experience has shown that when properly constructed, so as not to encroach upon the traveled way, it is very rarely the case that one is injured therefrom.

In considering the degree of carelessness properly attributable to a city in allowing these entrances to private property from the street, we are not to judge of it from the fact of one accident, but rather what would have been the course of prudent persons prior to the accident. Would such a person consider that the sidewalk was unsafe to travel by reason of such entrance? Would a prudent man, considering the character of the entrance with reference to the use of the street as a public way for travel, come to the conclusion that such entrance was likely to cause an injury? Chicago v. Starr, 42 Ill. 174.

These are questions that should be calmly and without prejudice considered by the jury in determining whether the city is properly chargeable with negligence, and the degree thereof. Ibid.

The burden of proof in this case is upon the plaintiff to prove to the court and jury not only, that the defendants below were negligent, but that at the time of the injury he was in the exercise of due care for his personal safety.

The evidence shows that this accident occurred in the early part of the evening when the lights were burning in the store of Young & Tompkins as usual, and appellee testified that the light from the window “ struck me in the face and I stepped right down the cellar-way,” and “ I supposed I was in front of tlie store door, and turned to go in and found I had mistaken the window for the door, and stepped into the cellar-way.”

It is hard to understand how a reasonably prudent man in possession of all his faculties could, in passing along a stone pavement ten feet wide, with all the lights from the store shining through the doors and windows, mistake a window in full view, and of the size of this, for the entrance to a store door materially different in size, appearance and construction and protected by figures nearly four feet high.

The appellee was well acquainted with the sidewalk entrance to the store and to the basement; besides he knew where he was going, and the way to properly go there, and there is no doubt had he paid the least attention to his footsteps, he would not have stepped down a flight of stairs, when he should have done exactly the contrary in order to reach the raised iron platform leading across the area to the store entrance, especially, when, as the proof clearly shows in this case that at the time of the injury the light was so shining upon the stairs, that the first two steps were plainly to be seen from the sidewalk.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ill. App. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-el-paso-v-causey-illappct-1877.