City of Rock Island v. Starkey

91 Ill. App. 592, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 125
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Ill. App. 592 (City of Rock Island v. Starkey) 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 Rock Island v. Starkey, 91 Ill. App. 592, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 125 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Belle Starkey brought this action against the city of Rock Island to recover damages for injuries which she claimed to have sustained from a fall on a defective sidewalk on the west side of Thirty-first street in said city. Upon a second trial she recovered a verdict awarding her damages, and a judgment for said damages, and the city of Rock Island prosecutes this appeal therefrom.

1. Appellant claims that the place where this injury occurred had not been accepted as a public street by the city of Rock Island, and it therefore is not responsible for any injuries appellee may have received on that spot. The strip of ground in question was of the ordinary width of á street, and it extended south from Fifth avenue 700 feet to a dead end. It had, however, an alley on each side through which access could be had to other streets. The fact it ceased at a dead end is not inconsistent with its being a public street. (Sheaff v. The People, 87 Ill. 189.) There were two dwelling houses on the east side of the street, and eight or ten or more on the west side. Some thirty-nine years before this accident this strip of ground was opened to public use by the owner of the adjoining lands, one Andrews, and it was for many years called Andrews street. A subsequent owner of the adjoining land built the sidewalk on the west side of the strip. Ho formal action by the city council was proven by which it accepted the offer to dedicate this strip for a street plainly implied by turning it out to public use as the owner did. The proof, however, shows that the public used the strip as a way' for public travel for about thirty-nine years; that from 1880 down to the time of this injury the street commissioner made repairs upon the street several times, filling up the places which had been washed out, and grading it, and obtaining the grade from the city engineer. A gutter was built in the street. There was proof (though disputed) that it was built by the city under the direction of the street commissioner. Water mains were put down in the middle of the street under the direction of the water committee of the city. The city dug the ditch and laid the main and paid for the labor ■and water pipes, and the city’s superintendent of water ■works had charge of digging the ditch and laying the main. The revised ordinances of the city contained a chapter entitled “ Street blames,” a part of the first section of which "was as follows:

“ The names of the streets of said city hereinafter mentioned running north and south be and are hereby changed, and in lieu of their present names said streets shall be, and hereby are designated and named as follows, to wit: * * * Twenty-ninth street: The street now known as Twenty-ninth street and Columbia street, in Howard’s addition, shall be called Twenty-ninth street. Thirtieth street: Elm street shall be called Thirtieth street. Thirty-first street: Andrews street and Thirty-first street, in South Park, shall be called Thirty-first street.”

This chapter contained various provisions for numbering the houses fronting on any street in the city, and for placing at street corners signs designating the names of the streets. All the general language of the chapter applied as fully to this strip of land formerly called Andrews street as to any other street of the city. It was held in the Town of Lake View v. LeBahn, 120 Ill. 92, that an acceptance of a street may be shown by user by the public, as by travel, or by acts of public officers in repairing and keeping up the streets. In City of Sullivan v. Tichenor, 179 Ill. 97, it was held that an acceptance of a street as dedicated to the public might be evidenced by user; that no formal act or ceremony .was necessary to an acceptance and that it was not necessary that there should be any record of such an act by which the public was invested with the easement. We are of opinion it sufficiently appeared from the evidence in this case that the public had accepted this strip of ground as a public street, and that the city of Book Island was responsible for the sidewalks thereon. It was said in Village of Marseilles v. Howland, 124 Ill. 547, that an incorporated town was not bound to build a sidewalk upon a public street, but that if one was constructed by an individual and used by the public with the knowledge of the town authorities the law would require the town authorities to remove the walk or assume responsibility for its reasonably safe condition.

2. Appellant argues that the sidewalk where appellee received her injury was not out of repair at that time. There was much proof offered each way upon that question, and it was a proper one for the determination of the jury. The jury have found that it was out of repair, and we see no reasonable ground for disturbing that conclusion.

3. Appellant claims it had no notice of the defective condition of this sidewalk. There was proof tending to show that the sidewalk had been out of repair so long that the city should have ascertained the fact, and also proof that the sidewalk was so constructed and had been down for such a long time that the city should have known that it required inspection and should have inspected it and ascertained its defective condition.

4. Appellant argues that the condition of appellee complained of was not the result of this fall upon the sidewalk. The testimony of all the witnesses who treated or saw appellee at that time supports the verdict of the jury upon that point. Appellee had been subject to serious physical ailment years before this fall, and even if these ailments still existed at the time of her fall, they were much aggravated by the fall, and notwithstanding her impaired physical condition she could recover for such injuries as resulted from the fall.

5. Appellant argues that appellee is feigning paralysis of her left leg. Such is the testimony of several experts who saiv her but once, and who attended at the instance of appellant. These experts were contradicted by many witnesses who saw her often or several times and by the physicians who treated her at different times since her fall. While the testimony of these experts unquestionably raises a doubt as to the seriousness of appellee's injuries, yet we are unable to say that the jury erred in finding as they did on this subject, when all the evidence is considered, or that another jury would reach a different conclusion from the same evidence.

6. Complaint is made of many rulings of the court upon the evidence. Most of these relate to the admission of proof of user of Thirty-first street by the public, and of acts of public officers in making repairs and improvements therein, when there had been no proof of any ordinance expressly excepting the strip as a public street. For the reasons already stated, we hold these rulings were correct. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses having testified to the laying of a water pipe in Thirty-first street, defendant sought to show, on cross-examination, that it was not uncommon for the witness, when superintendent of the city water works, to lay such pipes for the city on private property. The court properly sustained an objection to this line of cross-examination. It was not germane to the direct examination. If the city had laid pipes at other places across private property, and if that fact had any tendency to rebut plaintiff’s case, such matter was independent proof for the defendant, to be offered by it when it came to make its case.

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Related

Sheaff v. People ex rel. Colwell
87 Ill. 189 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1877)
Town of Lake View v. Le Bahn
120 Ill. 92 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
Village of Marseilles v. Howland
16 N.E. 883 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)
City of Sullivan v. Tichenor
53 N.E. 561 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. App. 592, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-rock-island-v-starkey-illappct-1900.