Fairfowl v. Price

221 Ill. App. 447, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 59
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 221 Ill. App. 447 (Fairfowl v. Price) 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
Fairfowl v. Price, 221 Ill. App. 447, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 59 (Ill. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Presidihg Justice Eagleton

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Charles M. Price, and Clyde L. Price, now deceased, were engaged as partners in •business under the firm name of “Sanitary Grocery” at the southeast corner of the intersection of Main and Broadway streets in Salem, Illinois.

The building in which the business was conducted was two stories high, 90 feet long north and south and 20 feet wide with a basement the full length and width of the building. The firm occupied the north 60 feet of the first floor of the building as its place of business and used the basement under the same as a wareroom. Immediately south of the storeroom was a stairway about 5 feet wide leading from the street on the west to the second story of the building/ South of the stairway was a small room occupied as a millinery store and south of that was a place of business occupied by C. H. Holt, both of the last mentioned rooms being on the first floor of the building. Under the millinery room was a room in the basement in which was kept the furnace used in heating the building.

At the south end of the part of the basement used by the Sanitary Grocery was a brick wall separating that part of the basement from the furnace room.

From a point approximately even with the south side of the millinery store to a point 20 feet north thereof, an excavation has been made under the sidewalk. This excavation is about 7 feet deep and the' width of the sidewalk and has a granitoid floor and is used in part, at least, for a coal room. At the south end of the coal room is a trapdoor and stairway leading from the sidewalk to the coal room and the furnace room and a small window at the south end of the basement used by the Sanitary Grocery that opened into the coal room. The trapdoor when closed was level with the sidewalk and was opened by raising back against the building. Above the window between the coal room and the part of the basement used by the Sanitary Grocery was an iron grating which was sometimes removed and skids laid from the sidewalk into the basement of the grocery store and articles taken into or removed from the basement.

On July 7, 1919, the door at the stairway leading from the sidewalk to the coal room and furnace room was open and the appellee, Hector C. Fairfowl, who was 68 years old and had been blind since he was 6 weeks old, was going north, fell into the opening and was severely injured. Suit was brought against the appellant and Clyde L. Price in which the defendants were charged with negligence in leaving said door open and that while the plaintiff was using due care for Ms safety lie fell into the hole and was thereby injured. To the declaration the defendants filed a plea of not guilty and a special plea, denying possession or control of the place where the plaintiff was injured.

The cause was tried by a' jury wMch found the defendants guilty and assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $600. The defendants filed a motion for a new trial. Later an amended motion for a new trial was made in which, among other averments, it was set forth that the defendant Clyde L. Price had died since the filing of the original motion for a new trial and that the said Clyde L. Price was a resident of Jefferson county and had departed this life and that the defendant Charles M. Price was not a ■ resident of Marion county and was not served with process in that county but was served in Payette county. Thereupon the plaintiff suggested the death of the defendant Clyde L. Price and the amended motion for a new trial was denied and judgment rendered on the verdict against the defendant Charles M. Price.

The grounds on which reversal is urged are that the court did not have jurisdiction to render judgment against the appellant; that the plaintiff did not prove by the preponderance of the evidence that the defendants were in possession or control of the passageway where he was injured and that he was in the exercise of due care; that the court erred in giving one of the instructions asked by the plaintiff and in refusing certain instructions offered by the defendants.

On the question first suggested there was no proof in the record showing or tending 'to show that the defendant Clyde L. Price was not a resident of Marion county and no effort made to raise that issue until the amended motion for a new trial was filed. In. fact he testified he had lived in Marion county since the 1st of March, 1919, while this suit was filed December 8, 1919, and process was served on him on the next day in Marion county. When the amended motion for a new trial was filed, letters of administration issued by the county court of Jefferson county to G-eorge L. Ore on the estate of Clyde L. Price were presented, but this cannot he held to deprive the circuit court of Marion county of jurisdiction. It appears from the record that the appellant was not a resident of Marion county hut resided and was served with process in Fayette county, and if the defendants both were nonresidents of Marion county, that issue should have been raised by a plea in abatement.

The question is discussed on the theory that the defendant Clyde L. Price was a resident of Marion county and the appellant a resident of Fayette county, and the claim is made that when the resident defendant died the court could not proceed to judgment against the nonresident. It will be observed that the deceased defendant was not formally dismissed as a defendant but his death suggested.

Section 12 of chapter 1, Hurd’s Rev. St. (J. & A. ¶[ 12), provides that in the event of the death of one of several defendants, such death may be suggested and the suit proceed as to the other defendant or defendants.

The question here presented is closely akin to the question presented in Lehigh Valley Transp. Co. v. Post Sugar Co., 228 Ill. 121, in which the Supreme Court said:

“The appellant was brought in as a defendant to this suit under section 2 of the Practice Act [now J. & A. ¶ 8543], which authorizes the plaintiff to commence his action against two or more defendants in the county where either defendant resides * *

“While a plaintiff will not be permitted to avail himself of the provisions of this Statute by making a resident of a county a defendant to a suit for the mere purpose of conferring apparent jurisdiction upon the courts of that county over persons found in other counties, yet where, as here, the resident is made a defendant in good faith and under a reasonable belief that a cause of action exists against him, and the nonresident defendants appear and defend the action, under the plain provisions of the statute the court in which the suit is pending has jurisdiction to render judgment against the nonresident defendants, even though the court directs a verdict in favor of the resident defendant.”

The same holding is made in Williams v. Morris, 237 Ill. 254.

Under these authorities the court had jurisdiction of the appellant when it rendered judgment.

On the question as to the proof that the defendants' were in possession or control of the place where the injury occurred: Ed. Sullens testified he saw a boy named Rogers open the cellar door and go down in the basement and that he did not see the boy come out.

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Engstrom v. Olson
248 Ill. App. 480 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
221 Ill. App. 447, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairfowl-v-price-illappct-1921.