Crane Co. v. Hogan

81 N.E. 1032, 228 Ill. 338
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 1032 (Crane Co. v. Hogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane Co. v. Hogan, 81 N.E. 1032, 228 Ill. 338 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee brought this suit in the superior court of Cook county, against appellant, to recover damages for the loss of a little finger while in the employ of appellant, and upon a trial obtained a verdict for $5000. On the hearing of a motion for a new trial the court announced that the verdict was excessive and that a new trial would be granted unless appellee remitted $1500 from the verdict. Appellee thereupon remitted the $1500 required, and the court being of opinion that appellee’s damages amounted to $3500, the motion for a new trial was denied and judgment was entered for said amount of $3500 and costs. The Appellate Court for the First District affirmed the judgment.

Appellee has made a motion to strike from the transcript of the record certified to this court certain instructions contained in the bill of exceptions, which recites the following facts: At the proper time appellant presented to the judge forty instructions as to the law claimed to be applicable to the case and asked him to give the same to the jury, but he refused to receive or examine the same, saying that he would receive and pass upon twenty instructions, and no more. Appellant excepted to the refusal of the judge to examine or pass upon the instructions. After the opening argument to the jury was completed the appellant handed to the judge twenty instructions, which he passed upon, and subsequently, by his permission, two others were added. The instructions which the judge refused to receive were not filed with the clerk or marked for identification at the time, but subsequently, on the settlement of the bill of exceptions, appellant presented to the judge instructions, with affidavits that they were the same ones which he refused to receive or examine. The bill of exceptions recites that the judge found, solely upon the evidence contained in the affidavits, that the instructions are the same tendered to him during the progress of the trial and prior to the arguments of counsel and which he refused to receive. The ground of the motion to strike these instructions from the record is, that the judge did not certify from his personal or judicial knowledge that the instructions were the same which were presented to him and which he refused to examine.

It was error to arbitrarily refuse to examine the instructions and decide whether they contained propositions of law involved in the case proper to be given to the jury. (Chicago City Railway Co. v. Sandusky, 198 Ill. 400; Chicago City Railway Co. v. O’Donnell, 208 id. 267; Chicago Union Traction Co. v. Olsen, 211 id. 255.) If the motion of appellee should be granted it would inevitably lead to a reversal of the judgment, since it would then appear that error was committed, and it could not appear that the error was harmless. A judgment will not be reversed unless error is affirmatively made to appear, but whenever error is shown to exist it will compel a reversal unless the record affirmatively shows that the error was not prejudicial. The court said in the case of Kirby v. People, 123 Ill. 436, that the rule is not that the court must see that the error worked injury to the party complaining, but that the court will not affirm where error has intervened unless it shall appear from the whole record that such error could not reasonably have affected the result. Inasmuch, however, as appellant has not consented to the allowance of the motion, we do not think that we ought to strike the instructions out of the transcript or consider the motion on its merits. The same motion was made in the Appellate Court and denied, and if that court erred, the proper practice would be for appellant to assign a cross-error on the decision of the Appellate Court. In order to pass upon the correctness of the decision of the Appellate Court we must consider the case upon the same record, and if the Appellate Court should err in ruling on such a motion it might be necessary to send the case back to that court to have it considered upon a different record. The motion is denied, as not being in accordance with the proper practice.

At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant asked the court to direct, a verdict of not guilty, which the court refused to do, and the refusal is assigned as error. That assignment raises the question whether there was evidence fairly tending to prove the case made by the declaration. It was alleged in the declaration that plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant, and in the ordinary course of his employment it became his duty to assist in the removal of a certain iron plate of great weight from a certain car then and there under the control of the defendant; that the defendant knew that the plaintiff was at work in the car or in the exercise of reasonable care would have known it; that the defendant negligently and carelessly, and without warning of any kind to the plaintiff, ran a switch engine against the car, causing the car to move suddenly and violently, by means of which the plaintiff, who was in the exercise of due care for his safety, was thrown with great force and violence against the side of the car and divers other objects there, by means whereof he was severely injured in and about the body, head and limbs, both internally and externally, and received a great nervous shock, from which he will never recover; that muscles and ligaments of his body were torn and bruised and lacerated, and he became sick, sore, lame and disordered, and so remained for a long time, during which he suffered and will suffer great pain and inconvenience, both in body and mind, on account of said injuries, and has been and will be prevented from transacting his business and affairs, and was obliged and will be obliged to expend large sums of money in endeavoring to be cured of his injuries, sickness and disorders. The only injury which plaintiff suffered or complained of was the loss of a little finger, which was amputated, with the usual consequences and inconveniences resulting therefrom.

The evidence most favorable to the plaintiff tended to prove the following facts: The defendant had a plant in Chicago called the Judd street yard or plant, in which there were private switch tracks, track scales, and platforms for loading and unloading sand, iron and other material. The plaintiff had been in the employ of the defendant about a year, and had worked in the daytime until the last eleven days before the injury, during which he worked in the night. The defendant had a switch engine in the yard for moving cars, which was operated by an engineer without a fireman, and there was one switchman, named William Roach. Michael Hayes was the foreman, and the laborers were the plaintiff, James Malone, John Ryan and two Poles, named Araskiewicz and Dergiowicz. During the last eleven nights the plaintiff had worked unloading sand and pig iron from freight cars and doing other like work with the other employees of defendant in the yard. On the night of the accident, at about half-past eleven, the plaintiff and Malone, Ryan and the two Poles commenced loading a box-car with borings, which came down from a tank through a chute six feet long and two feet wide, into the car. There was an iron plate about three feet square and one-fourth inch thick laid in the center of the car, under the chute, so that the men could shovel from the plate to the ends of the car. The plate had been frequently used for that purpose, and the men had been told to take the plate out when they were through with it. It took about two and one-half hours to load the car.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 1032, 228 Ill. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-co-v-hogan-ill-1907.