Curran v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad

124 N.E. 330, 289 Ill. 111
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1919
DocketNo. 12686
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 330 (Curran v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad) 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
Curran v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad, 124 N.E. 330, 289 Ill. 111 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action on the case brought by the appellee, John Curran, a minor, by his guardians and next friends, in the circuit court of Cook county to recover damages against the Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Company, (hereafter called for convenience the Western Indiana,) the Belt Railway Company, the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway’ Company, the Pennsylvania Company, and the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway Company, (the last two hereafter called for convenience the Pennsylvania Lines.) Damages were claimed/for personal injuries sustained by appellee on April IS, 1915. The declaration contained four counts.. The first charged, in substance/that appellants had failed to build fences alongside their tracks, in violation of certain ordinances therein set out, and that as a consequence thereof appellee, a boy fifteen years old, walked upon the tracks where people had been in the habit of crossing, and while in the exercise of due care and while standing beside a moving train was struck by some projection from one» of the cars and thrown down under the wheels.^ The second count charged a failure to maintain sufficient fences, in .violation of the same ordinances. The third count, which charged negligence in operating a train with some object projecting from its side, and the fourth count, which charged willful and wanton injury, were both dismissed by appellee. The case went to the jury on the first and second counts under pleas of not guilty of the Western Indiana and the Pennsylvania Lines, the suit being dismissed by appellee as to the Belt Railway Company and the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St Louis Railway Company. The jury returned a verdict against appellants, fixing damages at $30,000, upon which judgment was entered. The judgment was affirmed on appeal to the Appellate Court, and a certificate of importance having been granted by the Appellate Court, the appellants have prosecuted a further appeal to this court.

John Curran, a lad fourteen years and ten months old, lived on the day of the accident at 9721 Houston avenue, Chicago. Houston avenue runs north and south. One block east is Baltimore avenue. Running east and west and crossing Houston avenue at right angles are Ninety-sixth, Ninety-seventh and Ninety-eighth streets. To the-east of Baltimore avenue about 200 feet, and running north and south parallel with the avenue, are the tracks of the Pennsylvania Lines. Immediately east of the tracks of the Pennsylvania Lines are the tracks of the Western Indiana. Ninety-sixth and Ninety-eighth streets continue east from their intersections with Houston avenue across Baltimore avenue and the tracks of appellants. Ninety-seventh street does not cross the tracks but ends at Baltimore avenue. It is paved and curbed to Baltimore avenue. Between Ninety-sixth and Ninety-eighth streets and Baltimore avenue and the tracks of appellants is an open, rectangular plot of ground grown up with weeds and tall slough grass. To the east of the tracks, between Ninety-sixth and Ninety-eighth streets, is another open tract extending to the Calumet river, also grown up with tall, coarse grass, except an acre fenced and occupied by Ira L. Wiggins, who lived on the south side of Ninety-sixth street, about a block east of the tracks and about two blocks west of the Calumet river. There was a path through the weeds on Ninety-seventh street extended, across the tracks to the Wiggins place. Wiggins raised poultry and truck, and people came to his place by way of the path to get fowls, eggs and vegetables. Boys also crossed there by way of the path to go swimming. There was no fence whatever on either side of the Pennsylvania tracks, and, so far as the evidence shows, never had been. There was no evidence that there had ever been a fence on the west side of the Western Indiana tracks. On the east side was a line of old posts, but for years there had been no fence there. Who put the posts there does not appear. Tracks here ran through a low, open field, there being no buildings, trees or obstructions on either side of Ninety-seventh street extended, on either side of the tracks. Coarse grass on each side of the tracks was in the fall about as high as a man’s head and a footpath was broken through this growth. At the time of this accident there was not much growth there. About y :4o in the morning of April 15, 1915, appellee left his home to go to the Wiggins place on an errand for his mother. He walked north on Houston avenue to Ninety-seventh street and then turned east on Ninety-seventh street. As he approached Baltimore avenue he saw a long mixed freight train passing south. He continued east on Ninety-seventh street and crossed Baltimore avenue. He then continued east across the open tract along the path to the tracks. The train was still passing south on the third track, which was the west track of the Western Indiana. It was a train of the Belt Railway Company. Appellee walked across the two Pennsylvania tracks and then stood between the east Pennsylvania track and the west Western Indiana track, waiting for the train to pass. As he stood there, about two feet from the train, he turned, facing south, and exposed his left side to the train. Though there iasome conflict in the evidence, it fairly tends to show that some object projecting from one of the cars struck appellee in the back of the head and knocked, him forward. In some manner, in falling, his left arm got under the wheels and it was so crushed that it had to be amputated. Appellee immediately jumped up and ran home. Appellee had lived in this neighborhood for more than five years and was thoroughly familiar with all surroundings. He knew that Ninety-seventh street ended at Baltimore avenue. He knew there were no fences along the tracks. He knew that the Pennsylvania used the first two tracks and that the Western Indiana used the next three tracks. There were about six feet between the adjacent tracks of the two systems.

This case rests entirely upon the alleged negligence of the appellants in their failure to build and maintain fences in accordance with certain ordinances of the city of Chicago. Unless, therefore, the appellants were required to fence but neglected to do so, and such neglect to fence was the proximate cause of this injury to appellee, there can be no recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 330, 289 Ill. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curran-v-chicago-western-indiana-railroad-ill-1919.