Dean v. Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc.

259 Ill. App. 180, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 759
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 29, 1930
DocketGen. No. 8,409
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 259 Ill. App. 180 (Dean v. Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc.) 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
Dean v. Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., 259 Ill. App. 180, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 759 (Ill. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error is to obtain relief from a judgment of $7,500 entered by the circuit court of Logan county against plaintiff in error, Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., a corporation, and in favor of Emma C. Dean, defendant in error.

The declaration consists of two counts. The first count avers that defendants Pioneer Stages, Inc., and Yelloway System were common carriers by motorbus from East St. Louis to,Chicago; that on October 12, 1928, Sinclair Refining Company operated and maintained at Lincoln a passenger station for receiving and discharging passengers transported by said defendants.

It is also alleged that defendants Pioneer Stages and Yelloway, together with Sinclair Company, then and there possessed, maintained and used said passenger station; that on October 12, 1928, Emma C. Dean purchased from said defendants a ticket for passage by bus from Lincoln to Chicago; that on account thereof it became the duty of said defendants to exercise the highest degree of care and diligence for the safety of plaintiff while being transported in their bus, and it was the duty of defendants to exercise the highest degree of care for safety of plaintiff while she was upon the station premises, where she was received as a passenger by defendants; that defendants did not regard their duty but permitted oil and grease to be spread upon the concrete surface of the platform station, which made it unsafe; that plaintiff, while exercising ordinary care, slipped and was injured.

The second count avers that on October 12, 1928, the Yelloway, Inc., and Pioneer Stages were common carriers by motorbus from Bast St. Louis to Chicago; that Sinclair Company operated and maintained a passenger station in Lincoln to receive and discharge passengers transported by said defendants.

It is also averred that defendants Pioneer Stages and Yelloway, together with Sinclair Company, possessed, maintained and used-said passenger station for receiving and discharging of passengers so transported; that plaintiff purchased a ticket from said defendants from Lincoln to Chicago; that it then and there became the duty of defendants to exercise the highest degree of care and diligence for the safety of plaintiff Dean while on the passenger station premises of said defendants. The defendants did not regard their duty and refused to accept plaintiff as a passenger and compelled plaintiff to leave the motorbus of defendants on the claim that there was not sufficient room in said bus to carry plaintiff as a passenger; and defendants negligently compelled plaintiff to leave the bus; that she so left and was on her way to the station-house of said defendants to exchange her ticket; that while walking upon the station platform, which was dangerous because a large amount of oil and grease and gasoline was permitted there by defendants, the plaintiff, while so walking, slipped and fell and was injured.

A general and special demurrer was interposed to the declaration by both defendant bus companies, and, upon hearing, was overruled. Plaintiff in error, Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., thereafter filed a plea of general issue and a special plea denying ownership and operation of the alleged station and station platform, and averred it had no supervision or control of said alleged premises where the injury occurred; that it was not a common carrier as alleged in the declaration, and did not maintain, operate or possess a business as alleged which required it to exercise the highest degree of care for plaintiff’s safety upon said station platform; that it did not permit oil and grease or gasoline upon the alleged platform, and it did not possess, maintain, control, operate or supervise directly or indirectly said station platform alleged in each count.

A formal replication concluding to the contrary was filed to this plea.

During the year 1928, the Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., a corporation, operated a system of busses for transportation of passengers, called the Yelloway Busses, between St. Louis, Chicago and Whiting, Indiana, and passing through Lincoln in Logan county, Illinois. At the intersection of Broadway and Sangamon, two business streets in Lincoln, which were both paved and intersected at right angles, the Sinclair Defining Company had a filling and service station with a concrete platform in front of it, having a right-hand and left-hand lane separated by a concrete base on which were stone pillars supporting a portico or roof over the lane nearest the building. This concrete platform slanted toward the north and east about six inches. In this filling station was a ticket office of the Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc. Previous to October 1, 1928, Mr. Cal. Wasson, who was deceased prior to the time of the trial of this case, was ticket agent for the Yelloway Pioneer System. Upon the premises at the corner of the intersection stood a large sign upon ' a base, which sign had painted in large letters “Yelloway, Inc., Authorized Ticket Agent, Lincoln, Illinois. ’ ’

■ By an arrangement made by Mr. Wasson as ticket agent for the Yelloway Pioneer System in consideration of the Yelloway Busses carrying bundles of The Evening Courier from Lincoln to the distributor in Atlanta, eleven miles north of Lincoln, The Lincoln Evening Courier carried as an advertisement for the Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., a time-table showing the time of the leaving and departure of the Yelloway Busses which advertisement bore the heading “Yelloway Pioneer System Inc. Schedules of Busses, ’ ’ giving the time of departure of busses both north and south and bearing, statement, “All busses leave from Sinclair Filling Station, Broadway and Sangamon Streets. ’ ’

When Mr. Wasson on October 1, 1928, retired from the service of the Yelloway Pioneer System, Mr. Summer skill, the traveling auditor of the Yelloway Pioneer System, Inc., prior to October 1, 1928, appointed Mr. G-. A. Wilmert of Lincoln ticket agent for the Yelloway Pioneer System.' Mr. Wilmert, called as a witness in behalf of the Yelloway Pioneer System, stated that preceding October 12, 1928, Mr. Summerskill stated to him that he, Wilmert, was appointed authorized agent for the Yelloway Company and at-that time the tickets to be sold to passengers were delivered to him together with the stamps for stamping the tickets with the name of the Yelloway Pioneer System and a schedule of fares. Thereafter Mr. Wilmert acted as ticket agent and the Sinclair Filling Station was used as the ticket office and the passenger station office for the convenience of passengers traveling upon the busses of the defendant in error company. This filling station building had a main office in which were chairs for the comfort and convenience of passengers in the station while waiting for busses and it was supplied with rest room and toilets for men and women,

The evidence of Fred Dehner, witness for plaintiff in error, was that many busses each day stopped for the receiving and discharging of passengers, and whenever the busses required oil, gasoline or other service, they were stopped upon the concrete platform of the station and the passengers were there received or discharged.

On October 12, 1928, defendant in error, Emma C. Dean, walked to the station of the Yelloway Busses, to which she was directed upon alighting from an interurban car upon which she had come from Peoria to Lincoln.

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259 Ill. App. 180, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-yelloway-pioneer-system-inc-illappct-1930.