Ditewig v. Peoria Railway Co.

160 Ill. App. 300, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 888
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1911
DocketGen. No. 5424
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 Ill. App. 300 (Ditewig v. Peoria Railway Co.) 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
Ditewig v. Peoria Railway Co., 160 Ill. App. 300, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 888 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

George A. Ditewig, the appellee, was the owner of the automobile, the injury to which by a collision with a street car of the Peoria Railway Company, the appellant, was described in Walsh v. Peoria Railway Company, 157 Ill. App. 453, wherein we reversed a judgment recovered by Walsh, chauffeur and employe of appellee, for injuries sustained by him in the same collision. That case was tried at the January term 1910, of the Circuit Court. This case was tried at the March term, 1910, of the Circuit Court, and, after a remittitur, appellee had a judgment for $3,761.79 for the injury to the automobile in said collision, and the street car company appeals. The first count of the declaration charged negligence and mismanagement in the driving of the street car. The second count charged a failure to sound a gong for a distance of 100 feet from the intersection of the two streets where the collision occurred, as required by an ordinance. The third count charged failure of appellant to observe an ordinance which required those in charge of a street car to keep a vigilant watch for carriages, etc., on the track, and on the first appearance of danger to stop the car in the shortest time and space possible. As it is claimed that there was more proof heard in this case than in the Walsh case, and that here some witnesses were impeached or contradicted, we deem it proper to discuss the evidence more fully than we did in that case. For brevity, a street car will be called a car and the automobile the auto; and though this record shows Monroe street running northeasterly and southwesterly and Morgan street crossing it at right angles, those directions will be described as north and south and east and west.

Monroe street runs north and south, and north is up hill. Morgan street runs east and west and west is up the bluff. Madison street is next east and Perry street next west of Monroe street and parallel with it. Evans street is next north and Wayne street next south of Morgan street and parallel with it. Appellant operated a double track street railway on Monroe street. The collision occurred at 3:55 p. m. on January 29,1909, during a blizzard or snow storm and high wind. Car No. 229 was going north on Monroe street on the east track, and stopped at the north side of Morgan street or a little further north and all its passengers there alighted. On the east side of the street a funeral procession was going north, and the last carriage passed car 229 while passengers were alighting. Walsh was driving appellee’s auto, and had left appellee at his place of business and was going north on Monroe street for the purpose of going to appellee’s home, which was on Madison street, north of Morgan. When he came nearly to the standing car discharging passengers, he turned west. It is appellee’s claim that he was headed up Morgan street between its curb lines intending to go west to Perry and tben north, taking this roundabout way to go to appellee’s home, and that, while he wás on the intersection of the two streets, appellant’s south bound car No. 232 struck the auto inflicting the injury complained of. It is appellant’s contention that "Walsh did not turn to drive up Morgan street, but that he swung round the rear of the standing car and turned diagonally across the south-bound track, intending to go up Monroe street on the left hand side, in order to get ahead of the standing car and of the funeral procession, and that he ran into the down bound car at the north line of Morgan street or still further north. It is necessary to consider the evidence on this question.

Walsh testified that he never drove by a funeral procession; that though Perry street was the longer way to appellee’s home and though both Madison street and Perry street were asphalted, yet he chose to turn on to Perry because the asphalt was somewhat broken on Madison; that he passed beyond the center of the two streets and then turned west from seven to ten feet behind the standing car and turned up Morgan street, when he was struck by car 232 going down; and that he .had not travelled six feet from the time he turned till the car hit the auto. Ford testified that he was standing on the rear platform of car 229, facing south, and saw Walsh turn the auto up Morgan street and that at the time of the collision Walsh was at or a little below the center of the intersection of Morgan and Monroe. Loomis testified that he was one half block west on Morgan driving a team east and saw the car strike the auto, and that at just about that time the auto was pointed directly towards him, and that when the auto turned towards him it was ten or fifteen feet above the intersection of the streets. Euey, motorman on car 232, testified that when his car was six or eight feet above the north line of Morgan street the auto whipped around the end of the standing car and struck his car before it got to the north line of Morgan. Hitchcock, a passenger on car 233 which was going south about a block ahead of car 232, testified that he was standing on.the rear of car 233 and saw the standing car and the funeral procession and saw this auto, and that the driver of the auto made a double turn; that he first turned up Morgan till he crossed the first track and then he turned diagonally up Monroe street slanting, and that it appeared to the witness that the auto was one half a car’s length above the crossing before the collision took place. Mrs. Gmelieh was a passenger on car 232 and testified that the car had not got as far south as the sidewalk when it was struck by the auto. Taylor, conductor on car 232, testified that the auto came around the angle of car 229 and that the collision occurred about the upper line of Morgan street. Piper was the motorman on car 229. He testified that after the collision he got off his car and saw the tracks of the auto in the snow where it had been pushed sideways by the street car and turned around, and testified that those tracks of the auto ended just above the upper line of Morgan street, which indicated that that was where the northward progress of the auto was arrested. Sprague, conductor on car 229, testified that he was standing in the rear vestibule or south end of his car where it was discharging passengers; that the auto crossed over the tracks five or sis feet behind his car and hit car 232 when it lacked four or five feet of having reached the south end of his car. There was therefore a very clear preponderance of direct testimony that the collision occurred about the north line of Morgan street or still further north. Certain circumstances in proof tend to the same conclusion. The controller in the front vestibule of car 232 was bolted to the floor with two one-half inch bolts and there were two brace irons at the top, one-half an inch wide by a quarter of an inch thick, bolted to the vestibule. The controller weighed between 250 and 300 pounds. The force of the collision knocked down the motorman and knocked the controller loose and it fell on top of the motorman. The car continued in motion because the power was on. The right front wheel of the auto caught in mechanism at the southeast corner of the car and the auto was forced around and dragged along with the car. It was not until the conductor, who was standing in the north end of the car and who was flung headlong to the floor of the car, had arisen and gone to the front and lifted the controller off the motorman that the latter got up and turned off the power at a switch in the top of the vestibule, and it was only then that the car stopped.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 Ill. App. 300, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditewig-v-peoria-railway-co-illappct-1911.