Engel v. Frank Parmalee Co.

169 Ill. App. 410, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 1, 1912
DocketGen. No. 16,108
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 Ill. App. 410 (Engel v. Frank Parmalee 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
Engel v. Frank Parmalee Co., 169 Ill. App. 410, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff: in this case, John H. Engel, June 26, 1909, recovered a judgment against the defendant corporation, the Frank Parmalee Company, in the Superior Court of Cook county for $2000. This judgment the defendant corporation seeks to reverse in this appeal. The judgment was obtained on the verdict of a jury in a personal injury case. The appellant maintains as its first contention that the court below erred in not directing the jury, as requested at the close of all the evidence, to return a verdict for the defendant. It asserts that the evidence had clearly shown that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury, and also that at the time of the accident he was engaged in a violation of law which contributed to the injury. On each pf these grounds, appellant contends, a peremptory instruction should have been given.

The appellant makes the further contentions that the verdict was manifestly against the weight of the evidence and that the Court erred in instructing the jury and in the admission of evidence.

The injury to the plaintiff, on which the suit was brought, occurred at about ten o’clock in the evening of October 17, 1907. The plaintiff was standing at the edge of the sidewalk in front of the Union Railroad Station on Canal street in Chicago, when an omnibus belonging to and run by the defendant company in its business, backed up to the curb without warning and caught his right foot and ankle between the iron step and cover at the rear end of the omnibus and a stone step on the outer edge of the sidewalk, rising about a foot and a half above the level of the sidewalk and about a foot long.

Both bones of the leg were broken. The plaintiff was taken to a hospital,'where he remained a month and where the leg was set and placed in a plaster cast. After three weeks the first cast was removed and a second substituted, which remained on for several weeks. After this was removed the plaintiff was obliged in walking to use crutches or canes, he says, for about a year, and the flesh wound did not entirely heal until the end of that time. The fracture and the reunion have left a slight permanent deformity and a slight limitation of the motion of the ankle, and the plaintiff complains of discomfort in the joint. No contention is made, nor could well be, that the verdict is excessive for the injury suffered.

Ordinarily, whether such an accident was the result pf negligence for -which the omnibus company, through its driver, was liable, and whether the plaintiff was himself guilty of negligence so proximately contributing to the injury as to prevent his recovery, even if the defendant was guilty also of negligence, would be questions for a jury.

The contention of the defendant that they were not so in this ease is based on the following reasoning. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was acting as a runner for a hotel (called The Golden Star) opposite the station. There was in force an ordinance of the city of Chicago which after defining a “runner” as one who solicited patronage or custom for certain business enterprises (including hotels) “on any railroad train or other place in the City,” provided that no person should be permitted to engage in the business of or act as a runner unless he should have obtained a license to do so. The ordinance further provided that such license could only be issued on application and after a “Board of Inspectors of Public Vehicles” should have found and reported to the Mayor that the applicant was honest, sober and capable and fit to be licensed. Another section provided that a person licensed as a runner should at all times wear a prescribed badge and that not more than one licensed runner should be permitted to ask or solicit business at railroad depots, etc., for any particular person or corporation engaged in any business for which such custom or patronage was being solicited by licensed runners.

The final section of the ordinance provided a penalty for any person who should solicit custom for any hotel (or for any other of the business enterprises mentioned in the first section) without having first secured a license.

For the year 1907 “The Golden Star” had procured a license for a person other than the plaintiff, and that person was at the time of the accident in the employ of The Golden Star and acting as a runner for it. Not only did the plaintiff have no license, bnt he conld Hot have obtained one. He was disqualified because The Golden Star could have but one licensed runner.

The plaintiff, just before his injury, went from "The Golden Star” to the station entrance to solicit patronage for that hotel, stood in the gutter, because runners were not allowed on the sidewalk, and at the time his leg was struck was gazing into the entrance of the station looking for prospective customers to come out of the door. As a runner he was compelled to keep off the sidewalk and stand in the gutter, where omnibuses were likely to back up at any minute. If he had not been violating the law by acting as a runner, he never would have been in'the gutter and therefore never would have been struck. Therefore his violation of the law contributed directly and proximately to the injury, and this prevents his recovery, irrespective of his own negligence or that of the defendant; or at least, from another point of view, his being at the station illegally acting as a runner was in itself conclusive evidence of negligence on his part contributing to the accident.

We think this reasoning more ingenious and plausible than sound. The plaintiff testified indeed that at the time of the injury he had gone from his hotel to the station with the intention of soliciting custom, ■ but he was not soliciting at the time, and his intention to violate the ordinance did not render him a trespasser on the street or in the gutter or on the sidewalk. He had a right as a citizen to be in either place, subject, of course, to such necessary police regulations and supervision as prevent one person from using his ordinary rights in the street to the injury of the equal rights of others. The custom of the police officers on duty at the station to compel persons actually soliciting or known or supposed to intend to solicit, to stand with at least one foot off the sidewalk, may have been necessary, expedient and justifiable. If so, and it was enforced against the plaintiff, any effect on his rights in this case would seem to us to he favorable to him rather than the reverse, in showing that his position, to the extent of not being entirely on the sidewalk out of harm’s way, was not to be attributed to him for negligence. We cannot assent to a theory that he had no right to be near the station at all, nor that his admitted prior violations of the ordinance and his admitted intention to violate it again if he had the opportunity, deprived him at the time of the injury of his civil rights as against a party against whom he was not individually offending even when he was actually in the act of violation.

What the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts said in Moran v. Dickinson, 204 Mass. 559, may be said properly in this case,—the bodily presence of the plain-1¡ tiff at the place of injury was an essential condition of his injury, but it does not follow that it must have been a cause thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 Ill. App. 410, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engel-v-frank-parmalee-co-illappct-1912.