Cullen v. Higgins

138 Ill. App. 168, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 720
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 23, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,550
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 Ill. App. 168 (Cullen v. Higgins) 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
Cullen v. Higgins, 138 Ill. App. 168, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 720 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

There have been two trials of this case. On the first trial the jury found for appellee and assessed her damages at the sum óf $5,650, and judgment was rendered'on the verdict. The appellant appealed from that judgment to this court, and we affirmed the judgment at the October term, 1903, of the court, and appellant appealed from the judgment of affirmance to the Supreme Court, and that court reversed the judgment of this court and the trial court remanded the cause to the trial court. Cullen v. Higgins, 216 Ill. 78. The cause was again tried in the Superior Court of Cook county, the pleadings being the same as on the first trial, and the jury found for the appellee and assessed her damages at the sum of $3,000, and judgment was rendered on the verdict, when appellant again appealed to this court. In Cullen v. Higgins, supra, the court uses the following language:

“It is therefore apparent whether the court erred in not taking the case from the jury on the ground of the failure of the appellee to prove negligence on the part of appellant is a very close question upon this record.
In addition to proof of actionable negligence on the part of appellant it was necessary, in order to make a case, that the appellee prove that at the time of the accident she was in the exercise of due care for her own safety—in other words, that her own negligence did not contribute to the injury. The appellee was familiar with the manner in which the elevator was operated and the manner of entering the same. "When she arrived at the south door thereof she did not attract the attention of the elevator boy to her presence, but remained standing outside the door of the elevator. She knew that Barry was not operating the elevator, but that it was under the control of the boy at the lever. Immediately after Barry came in the elevator the elevator boy threw the lever, the effect of which she knew would be to cause the elevator to ascend. At that time the elfevator boy was. facing the office and did not turn to look at her, but the appellee attempted to get into the elevator after it had started to ascend. She did this without knowing the boy in control of the elevator knew of her presence. She relied upon the bell-boy and not upon the boy in charge of the elevator, to open the door for her. Appellee did not notify the boy in charge of the car of her presence and that she desired .to enter the elevator. She saw the south door was closed and remained outside that door from three to five minutes instead of stepping around to the north door, which was open, and after the elevator door was thrown open by the bell-boy she attempted to enter the elevator, although she knew at that time the elevator boy had thrown the lever of the elevator, the effect of which would cause the car to ascend. We think this evidence, given as it is by appellee, shows that she was injured by her own negligence in attempting to enter the elevator after it had started to ascend, and that by reason of such negligence she cannot recover— that is, she failed to prove upon the trial she was in the exercise of due care for her own safety at the time she was injured, and for a failure to make such proof the court should have peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the appellant.”

The court also held that the trial court erred in refusing an instruction asked by the appellant in reference to the necessity of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff, and also in giving an instruction asked by the appellee in respect to damages. The opinion of the Supreme Court is the law of the case, on the evidence in the record before us and before the Supreme Court on the former appeals, and unless the evidence on the last trial, which is in the record now before us, is materially different from that on the former trial, there cannot, in accordance with the opinion of'the Supreme Court, be a recovery by appellee. Therefore, the chief question is whether there is such material difference. The differences claimed by appellee’s counsel are:

(1) On the former trial it was testified that the elevator was 6 feet wide by 7 feet long, while on the last trial it appeared by actual measurement it was 3 feet 10 inches from south to north, and 5 feet 1 inch from east to west. It appears from the record in the former appeal, the abstract of which is before us, that appellee and James Barry testified “the elevator platform is about four or five feet wide; it is about square, I should judge,” and that Thomas L. Corbett, clerk in appellant’s hotel, testified: “The elevator was about five feet square, I should judge.”

We find no evidence in the abstract of the record in the former appeal that the elevator was 6 feet wide by 7 feet long. In the present case Margaret Walsh testified that she assisted in measuring the elevator, and that it was 46 inches in width by 61 inches in length, thus making a difference in the dimensions of the floor of the elevator, as testified to in the former and the present case, of 1 inch one way and 14 inches the other way.

(2) On the former trial appellee testified that when she arrived at the south door of the elevator, she waited three, four or five minutes before the door was opened, while on the last trial she testified that, as she arrived at the south door, she saw the bell-boy coming, and she stood at the south door while he was walking across the office floor, and entering the elevator, and that the time could only have been a few seconds. We find this claim of difference in the evidence sustained by the record. On the former trial appellee testified: “I went to the door on the south end of the elevator; the door was closed. I must have been there three or four minutes, probably five minutes, because the boy did not see me.” On the last trial appellee testified that when she reached the elevator door she saw the elevator boy reading, and, at the same time, saw Barry, the bell-boy, coming toward the elevator past the hotel office, carrying a pitcher of water, and that he came through the elevator and opened the south door for her. She further testified, “From the time I first came up to the elevator to the time he opened the door and I started to step into the elevator car, the length of time was just enough so that he could walk from where I saw him first to the door and open it for me. That was about twelve feet.” Q. “In point of time, how long was it, would you say?” A. “It couldn’t have been very long.” Q. “Inminutes or seconds?” A. “It must have been seconds; it couldn’t have been minutes.”

(3) On the former trial appellee testified in chief, that when the bell-boy, Barry, opened the door for her, she attempted to enter the elevator, and had one foot on it when it started to go np, and she tried to cling to something. On cross-examination she testified that Barry opened the south door where she was standing, and, immediately after Barry came into the elevator, the elevator boy started the elevator; also that she noticed the elevator boy swing the lever as soon as Barry stepped into the elevator. She further testified, on cross-examination, on the former trial: “I knew when the boy threw the lever the elevator went up. I had seen the elevator go up and down. I was not watching the switching of the lever; I was watching the boy opening the door for me.

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Related

Thompson v. Northern Hotel Co.
166 Ill. App. 618 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 Ill. App. 168, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullen-v-higgins-illappct-1907.