Doering v. Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co.

196 Ill. App. 129, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 106
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
DocketGen. No. 6,033
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 Ill. App. 129 (Doering v. Peoria & Pekin Union 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
Doering v. Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co., 196 Ill. App. 129, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 106 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, a crossing flagman on Fulton street in the City of Peoria, was struck by the head end of a passenger car of appellant being driven upon said crossing and was seriously injured, and brought this suit to recover damages therefor, and filed a declaration of three original and two additional counts, which were sufficient to state the case which appellee sought to prove. Appellant filed the general issue and there was a jury trial, and appellee had a verdict for $4,000. A motion by appellant for a new trial was denied, judgment was entered on the verdict and the defendant below appealed. We affirmed the judgment, and we granted a rehearing to enable us to re-examine the evidence, and we have carefully examined it in the record, which is fuller than the abstract.

At the place in question four railroad tracks run northeasterly and southwesterly in the City of Peoria below a bluff and near the river. Fulton street crosses them at right angles. The track nearest the river is the Chicago-bound track of the Chicago, Eock Island & Pacific Eailway Company. The track next northwest of that is the Eock Island track for trains coming from Chicago. These are called the outbound and inbound tracks. The third track to the northwest is the main track of the Peoria & Pekin Union Eailway Company. The track nearest the bluff is the freight track of the Peoria & Pekin Union Eailway Company. On the river side of the tracks, just southwest of Fulton street, is the passenger station of the Eock Island road. About four blocks southwest is the union station which is used by the Peoria & Pekin Union Eailway Company. The latter road operated passenger trains from Fulton street to.Pekin, a number of miles away. These trains were made up at the union depot, four blocks southwest, with the engine ahead of the car or cars when making the trip to Pekin, and then were backed up to Fulton street. For the protection of the train and the public, there was upon the northeast end of the car, which was ahead as the train backed up, an air brake and an air whistle intended to be operated by the brakeman of the train, whose duty it was to stand on the advancing end of said train as it backed, and blow the whistle to warn people from coming upon the track, and to apply the air brake and stop the train whenever danger required it and when the place was reached where it was to stop. That railway had no depot at Fulton street, but on the northwest side of its main track and southwest side of Fulton street it had a platform running southwest from Fulton street twenty feet or more. The train usually consisted of one car with a ladies’ compartment in the northeast end, a baggage room in the middle, and a smoking compartment in the southwest end. A passenger train was due to leave the Eock Island station just southwest of Fulton street at one o’clock p. m., each day, and at the same time this train for Pekin was due to leave from this platform southwest of Fulton street. On Sunday, April 14, 1912, the Bock Island train left on time, and almost immediately thereafter the Pekin train, backing up, reached Fulton street. It had two cars on that day. Appellee was crossing flagman for all the tracks on Fulton street. He had no duty to stop or signal trains. His sole duty was to watch for coming trains on each track in all directions and to warn foot passengers and drivers of teams and vehicles using said street and to protect them from coming trains. He had a rest shanty southeast of all the tracks. He was on the pay roll of the Bock Island road, and was paid by that company, but appellant paid the Bock Island company one-half of his salary each month. He was, in reality the servant of both companies. So far, there is no substantial conflict in the testimony.

In many other respects the evidence is conflicting. As a single example thereof, some witnesses testified that at the time of the accident the train backed substantially all the way across Fulton street, and then pulled forward until the rear of the car was at the southwest line of Fulton street. Other witnesses testified that the car was backed to about the middle of Fulton street, and was then pulled forward. The engineer is very positive that the northeast end of the train only reached the line of Fulton street. The evidence warranted the jury in finding that the flagman was struck when he was about the middle of Fulton street, and that the train went some further than that. Appellee and some other witnesses heard no bell ringing, but at least three witnesses swore that there was an automatic bell upon the engine at the rear of this train as it was pushed northeast, and that the automatic bell was started to ringing before the train started from the union station, and did not stop until after this accident. Appellee flagged the crossing when the Bock Island train went northeast. He seems to have gone over to the northwest side of all the tracks and then started back towards his shanty and, at the time he was struck, was facing to the northeast, and perhaps standing still. He was able to tell about how far the Rock Island train had gone up the track. The proof also shows that a Rock Island train from Chicago had been due some twelve or fourteen minutes and had not arrived. It was, in fact, twenty-five minutes late, but there is nothing to show that appellee knew that fact. It is quite possible he was looking northeasterly watching for that past due train. His left hip was struck by the corner of the step on the river side of the advancing car. He was whirled around facing the car a little back of the steps, and threw his hands up against the car to avoid being thrown under it, and then fell down.

The proof by appellee and his witnesses tended to show that as that train approached and reached Fulton street there was no one on the front end of that advancing car and no one operating the air whistle or air brake, and that they were not operated. The brakeman whose duty it was to operate it had left the employ of appellant some five months before the trial, and appellant did not produce him nor show its inability to do so. The conductor testified that he stood in the door of the car, that the brakeman was at his post sounding the air whistle and ready to apply the air brake, and that he saw appellee on the crossing far enough away from the line of the approaching car so as to be in a place of safety and then turned his attention to the passengers standing in the street on the other side of the track so as to see that they did not run any risk of being hurt. Appellant drew out of the appellee on cross-examination, and without objection, that the conductor came to see him the next day after the accident, and told him that “we” (evidently meaning the conductor and brakeman) “were in the end of the car talking.” Appellee’s son testified in rebuttal, by way of impeachment of the conductor, that on the next day after the accident the conductor •called upon him at his place of business, and in answer to questions told him that at the time of the accident he, the conductor, was in the passenger car counting his tickets and change, and that he did not know where the brakeman. was. The conductor admitted that he had these interviews, but denied both of these statements. No one but the conductor testified that the brakeman was at his post of duty, as the car was pushed backward.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Ill. App. 129, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doering-v-peoria-pekin-union-railway-co-illappct-1915.