Dabrowski v. Illinois Central Railroad

24 N.E.2d 382, 303 Ill. App. 31, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 435
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 22, 1939
DocketGen. No. 40,645
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 24 N.E.2d 382 (Dabrowski v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Dabrowski v. Illinois Central Railroad, 24 N.E.2d 382, 303 Ill. App. 31, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 435 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, at the time of the occurrence on which her suit is based, was a child nine years of age. She lived with her parents at 314 E. 157th street, Harvey, Illinois, in Cook county. The building was a two flat. A family named Myers lived in the lower flat. The Myers family also occupied the basement. However, the children of both families played there at times. The building was located 6 or 7 blocks east of the right of way of defendant railroad.

On Saturday, June 27, 1936, two boys of the Myers family, John, then 10, and Edward, 13 years of age, while on their way home from the business district of Harvey, were walking on the east side of Commercial avenue, a public highway running north and south, parallel and adjacent to defendant’s right of way and tracks north of 157th street, an east and west highway intersecting Commercial avenue. South of 157th street, Commercial avenue was known as West avenue. The boys saw a red light burning on the embankment upon which defendant’s tracks were laid. They walked over to it, and Edward Myers picked it up. It was a fusee, an article much used in the railroad business. The fusee was lying on the embankment of defendant’s right of way at a point about 50 feet north of the 157th street subway and a few feet west of the west line of Commercial avenue. The fusee was not stuck in the ground by its spike but was lying on the slope with a rock under it. It was about half burned out. Edward Myers knew what the article was. He put the fire out, carried the fusee home and put it under a box in the basement. Benny, the little brother of plaintiff, was in the basement at the time and saw where the fusee was placed. Edward warned Benny not to “bother” with the fusee. On the next day (Sunday, the 28th) Benny went alone to the basement and without permission from anybody took and carried away this fusee. Benny knew what a fusee was. He says he had seen the men throw them off the railroad. He carried the fusee to the back yard and porch in the rear of the building. He lighted some papers with a match, put this burning paper against the fusee, and, he says, it went off like a skyrocket. He held the fusee against a wooden board which was part of the building. Plaintiff, Benny’s sister Eleanor, was with him, wearing an “organdy” dress. It was light, filmy, and blew in the wind. A white thing, Benny says, was sputtering. The dress caught fire. Eleanor and Benny cried out. Their mother came, and with much effort put out the fire, hut not until plaintiff was badly burned. Plaintiff was taken to a hospital.

Plaintiff sued defendant railroad charging negligence with respect to the fusee. The cause was tried by a jury. At the close of the evidence there was a motion by defendant for a verdict in defendant’s favor. Ruling thereon was reserved. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $22,500. Defendant made motions for a new trial and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The last named motion was allowed and judgment entered for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals.

The record presents the question of whether there is any evidence from which the jury, under the law, could reasonably return a verdict for plaintiff. Provensano v. Illinois Central R. Co., 357 Ill. 192.

Defendant argues the judgment in its favor is right because the evidence wholly fails to prove defendant was connected in any way with the fusee in question. It was, of course, essential to show this connection. Defendant cites cases such as Conreaux v. Industrial Commission, 354 Ill. 456; Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v. Coogan, 271 U. S. 472, 478; Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Toops, 281 U. S. 351, 355 and Sward v. Megan, 284 Mich. 421, 279 N. W. 886, to the point that a court may not substitute speculation, conjecture or surmise in place of proof. Defendant also calls attention to Rumbold v. Supreme Council Royal League, 206 Ill. 513, 520, to the effect that the existence of a fact which must be affirmatively proved by plaintiff is never presumed from the mere absence of facts showing the contrary. A fusee is attached to the record by stipulation of the parties as illustrative of the type of fusee used by railroads generally. This is not the fusee of the accident, which Benny threw away in a field and which has never been found. The attached fusee was manufactured by the Central Railroad Signal Company, and it is admitted that fusees made by that company were used by defendant. The uncontradicted evidence is to the effect that the fusee taken home by Edward Myers was found on defendant’s right of way. Possession might justify an inference of ownership, and plaintiff, while admitting there is no direct evidence of defendant’s connection with the fusee, says the circumstantial evidence is sufficient and convincing.

The track of defendant nearest to Commercial avenue was a switch track 35 feet west of the west boundary line of the street. The main track of defendant’s road at this place ran on an embankment which was 70 feet from this west line of Commercial avenue. An ordinance of the city of Harvey gave defendant an easement in a part of this street. Defendant says that the evidence of Marble, a former employee of defendant, who testified as a witness for the plaintiff, as first given tended to show that a fusee thrown from the engine of defendant’s train would have been 130 feet further north than the point where the fusee was found by the Myers boys, or if thrown by other of the trainmen would have been as far as 1,500 feet north of 157th street. Later Marble gave testimony to the effect that fusees were used by engineers on defendant’s trains in making inspections of their engines while waiting at 157th street before entering the Markham Yards of defendant, which were located some distance south of 157th street. Defendant insists that this evidence of Marble should be given little weight. That question, however, was for the jury.

Edward Myers testified that he saw the fusee burning when he was a half block away; John Myers said he saw it when 200 feet away from it. When it was picked up it as about half burned, and the evidence showed that it took a fusee of this kind about 10 minutes to burn up. Apparently, therefore, it had been placed where it was only a few minutes before it was found. Both boys said the fusee was of the type in general use by defendant. A witness, who for several years had lived at 194 E. 157th street, about 300 feet from defendant’s right of way, testified that children played in the vicinity of 157th street and north on Commercial avenue; that she had seen fusees, some burning, some burned out, thrown on defendant’s right of way from the trains; that children picked them up; that the fusees were generally thrown after 5:00 p. m. and were thrown from trains, some of which ran north and some south. For the most part these were thrown from the middle, of the train. She had seen a train stop, and a man put one of these fusees in between the ties of the track; the children took the fusees that were thrown down from the embankment, and at times took them burning; children would congregate there and play on the embankment; she had seen them ride their bicycles up and down the embankment.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E.2d 382, 303 Ill. App. 31, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dabrowski-v-illinois-central-railroad-illappct-1939.